By Sebastian Edward-West · Last updated May 28, 2026

BC Step Code Requirements by Municipality

Key takeaway: Step 3 is the provincial minimum for Part 9 residential across BC, but many municipalities require a higher Energy Step and/or a Zero Carbon Step Code emission level (EL) on top of it. Climate zone and heating degree days (HDD) change what wall assembly actually passes. Always confirm the current bylaw with the local building department before you apply for a permit — municipal requirements change on their own schedules, ahead of provincial timelines.

The 2024 BC Building Code consolidated the Energy Step Code (formerly hosted at energystepcode.ca) and the Zero Carbon Step Code into one structure. Since March 10, 2025, every Part 9 permit application must comply with the consolidated code. The provincial floor is Step 3 plus Zero Carbon EL-1, but a municipality can — and many do — adopt a higher step or a higher carbon tier through a local bylaw or a Building Bylaw amendment.

This page compares what builders actually face city by city. For the cities where there is a dedicated guide, the city name links to the full breakdown (permit office, fees, local failure modes, rebate stack).

How to read this table

  • Energy Step — the airtightness + energy-modelling tier (Step 3 = 2.5 ACH50, Step 4 = 1.5 ACH50, Step 5 = 1.0 ACH50).
  • Zero Carbon (EL) — the operational greenhouse-gas tier. EL-1 measures and discloses; EL-2/EL-3 cap emissions; EL-4 is effectively zero-carbon (strong-electrification).
  • Climate Zone / HDD — Climate Zone 4 is the mildest (coast), 5 is the Interior valley floors, 6 is the mountains and north. Higher HDD (heating degree days) means a tighter envelope and more exterior insulation to clear the same step.
  • Notable local rule — anything that deviates from the bare provincial minimum.

Energy Step Code by municipality

MunicipalityEnergy StepZero CarbonClimate Zone / HDDNotable local rule
KelownaStep 3EL-1CZ5 / 3,715$325 mid-construction blower door rebate (max 3/builder/yr)
West KelownaStep 3EL-1CZ5 / ~3,750Wildfire (WUI) overlays affect cladding and venting on Glenrosa/Smith Creek slopes
Lake CountryStep 3EL-1CZ5 / ~3,800Permit-fee rebate for Step 4/5 builds (Bylaw 1070)
PeachlandStep 3EL-1CZ5 / ~3,700Steep-slope lakeshore lots; stack effect on tall builds
VernonStep 3EL-1CZ5 (cold end) / ~3,900Elevation belts — Predator Ridge/Silver Star model as upper-CZ5 to CZ6
ColdstreamStep 3EL-1CZ5 / ~3,900Permitted via Vernon-area trades; same North Okanagan climate
ArmstrongStep 3EL-1CZ5 / ~3,950Spallumcheen agricultural lots; larger rural footprints
EnderbyStep 3EL-1CZ5 / ~3,950Shuswap River valley; cold-air pooling
LumbyStep 3EL-1CZ5 (cold end) / ~3,950Monashee cold-air drainage; Village vs RDNO permit boundary
Salmon ArmStep 3EL-1CZ5 / ~4,000Shuswap lake-effect humidity; envelope drying matters
PentictonStep 3EL-1CZ5 (mild end) / ~3,400Mildest Okanagan HDD; Naramata Bench micro-climate
SummerlandStep 3EL-1CZ5 / ~3,450Bench elevation variance above the lake
OliverStep 3EL-1CZ5 (hot/dry) / ~3,300High cooling load; overheating-protection rule bites here
OsoyoosStep 3EL-1CZ5 (hottest) / ~3,200Lowest HDD in BC; design for summer overheating, not just heating
KamloopsStep 3EL-1CZ5 (semi-arid) / ~3,650Significant cooling load; Sun Peaks builds model as CZ6
MerrittStep 3EL-1CZ5 / ~3,900Nicola Valley; wide diurnal swing
RevelstokeStep 3EL-1CZ6 / ~4,500CZ6 snow loads; R-15+ exterior typical; ski-chalet complexity
Big WhiteStep 3EL-1CZ6 (alpine) / 4,500+Deep snow loads; treat as full CZ6 with thermal-bridge-free roofs
VancouverStep 3–4*Zero CarbonCZ4 / ~2,825Vancouver Building By-law (separate from BCBC); strong electrification + carbon limits
WhistlerStep 4advancingCZ6 / ~4,000At Step 4 (1.5 ACH50) since January 2024; advancing carbon tier
BurnabyStep 3EL-4CZ4 / ~2,900Zero Carbon EL-4 (near-zero-carbon) since January 2025
SurreyStep 3EL-1CZ4 / ~2,900Mandatory mid-construction blower door test at 4.0 ACH50 before insulation inspection
North VancouverStep 3+ELCZ4 / ~3,000District/City both push carbon ahead of the provincial floor
VictoriaStep 3EL-1CZ4 (mild) / ~2,650Mildest HDD on the table; envelope is easy, modelling is the constraint
LangfordStep 3EL-1CZ4 / ~2,700Fast-growth West Shore; high-volume Part 9
NanaimoStep 3EL-1CZ4 / ~2,900Mid-Island coastal; standard CZ4
SquamishStep 3+ELCZ4/6 transition / ~3,000Sea-to-Sky corridor; coastal-to-alpine transition

* Vancouver operates under its own Vancouver Building By-law rather than the provincial BC Building Code; its requirements are functionally at or above Step 4 with explicit carbon limits. Confirm directly with the City of Vancouver.

What this means for your build

The envelope target follows the climate zone, not the step number alone. A wall that clears Step 3 in Victoria (CZ4, ~2,650 HDD) will not necessarily clear the same step in Revelstoke (CZ6, ~4,500 HDD). The colder the zone, the more exterior insulation and the tighter the air barrier you need to hit the same modelled energy use. Run a fresh HOT2000 model on the actual city’s weather file — do not copy a spec sheet from a milder town.

Watch the Zero Carbon tier separately. Several municipalities (Burnaby EL-4, Vancouver, North Vancouver) require a carbon/electrification performance that is independent of the airtightness step. You can pass the Energy Step and still fail the local carbon requirement if you specify the wrong heating fuel.

Mid-construction testing is sometimes mandatory, often smart. Surrey requires a mid-construction blower door test at 4.0 ACH50 before the insulation inspection. Even where it is optional, a pre-drywall test catches leaks while they are still cheap to fix — after drywall, the cost to remediate a failed envelope multiplies. See pre-drywall air sealing.

Overheating protection is now a code requirement. Since 2024, at least one living space must be designed to stay below 26°C in summer. In the hot/dry South Okanagan (Oliver, Osoyoos) and semi-arid Kamloops, this rule drives design more than the heating side does.

Heading toward Step 4

Step 4 (1.5 ACH50) is expected to become the provincial minimum around 2027. Municipalities already at Step 4 — Whistler since 2024 — show what is coming. Builders capturing higher FortisBC rebates today by building above the local minimum are also de-risking that transition. The practical move in any jurisdiction: build tighter than today’s bylaw requires, test mid-construction, and use the data to dial in your air sealing before Step 4 lands.

Verify before you apply

Municipal requirements change on local schedules. This table reflects the situation as of the date above and is a starting point, not a permit document. Before you finalize a design or submit a building permit application, confirm the current Energy Step, Zero Carbon tier, and any mandatory testing directly with the municipality’s building department and your registered energy advisor.