Kelowna, B.C., gains approval to bypass short-term rental restrictions ahead of the 2026 summer tourism peak. This one-time exemption aligns with provincial efforts to fast-track opt-outs for cities maintaining rental vacancy rates above 3%.
Updated Opt-Out Process
Starting in 2027, eligible communities must submit opt-out requests by February 28 annually, shifting from the prior March 31 deadline. Approved exemptions take effect June 1, rather than November 1. For Kelowna, officials apply this accelerated schedule this year, citing major summer events planned for 2026.
Rules Aim to Boost Housing Supply
Introduced in 2023, the regulations curb short-term rentals of primary residences to expand long-term housing availability. Tourism-dependent areas have pushed back against these measures.
Housing Minister Christine Boyle emphasizes that the policy returns homes to the long-term rental market while offering flexibility to regions with strong vacancy levels. “Accelerating these timelines will assist communities like Kelowna that have brought vacancy rates to healthy levels through their hard work on housing to make the most of the summer tourism season,” Boyle states. The city upholds the principal-residence rule in most residential zones.
Kelowna-Mission MLA and Opposition economic development critic Gavin Dew welcomes the change, describing it as “overdue.”

