In honour of National Pet Day on April 11, FIRST UNITED and the BC SPCA are calling on the provincial government to join them in improving conditions for tenants and their animal companions by fulfilling Premier David Eby’s promise to prohibit no-pet clauses in multi-rental unit housing.
Both FIRST UNITED and the BC SPCA have witnessed the heartbreaking impacts of a lack of pet-friendly housing. For tenants, FIRST UNITED, based in the Downtown Eastside, has seen that blanket pet bans contribute to displacement and homelessness in B.C. and have a particularly negative impact on vulnerable groups like women escaping violence, 2SLGBTQAI+, seniors and more. For pets, housing challenges are one of the primary reasons the BC SPCA sees surrender requests of healthy animals, despite these animals already having loving families that desperately want to care for them. Since 2014, over 12,400 pets have come into the BC SPCA’s care for housing reasons.
To address this issue, the charities are joining forces and excited to invite the Ministry of Housing to make necessary changes to the Residential Tenancy Act (RTA), following through on the BC NDP’s 2024 election promise to “end bias against pet owners in purpose-built rental housing.”
FIRST UNITED has submitted recommendations to amend the RTA to prohibit pet restrictions in rental buildings with five or more units (first in September 2025 and as recently as March 17, 2026). Its policy submission demonstrates that removing pet bans is a matter of equity and inclusion, providing evidence that the vast majority of pet damage, when it does occur, is covered by pet deposits. The charity conducted a detailed review of Residential Tenancy Branch (RTB) decisions on pet damage and found that compensable damage was less than tenant deposits in more than 82% of cases.
“While we recognize that some landlords and housing providers have legitimate concerns about allowing pets, FIRST UNITED’s ground-breaking research proves that these are the exception, not the norm, and not a valid reason for widespread pet bans and restrictions,” says Sarah Herring, government relations officer for the BC SPCA. “Studies from other jurisdictions have shown that, on average, tenants with pets do no more damage than tenants without, and now we know this is also true in British Columbia. Landlords and housing providers should be more confident about housing people and their pets together, knowing that over 82% of pet damage claims in the past eight years were fully covered by the pet deposits permitted by the Residential Tenancy Act”.
To help create more opportunities for people and their pets to access safe, affordable housing together, the BC SPCA recently published a Pet-Friendly Housing Toolkit for Non-Profit Housing Providers. The resources in the Toolkit were developed based on input from non-profit housing providers; however, they encourage market rental owners, managers and stratas to use the Toolkit to create their own pet-friendly programs. To learn more about the BC SPCA’s pet-friendly housing advocacy and the importance of housing people and pets together, go to spca.bc.ca/pet-friendly-housing.
“People should not have to choose between surrendering their pet and having a home,” says Sarah Marsden, Director of Systems Change and Legal for FIRST UNITED. “The BC SPCA’s new Pet-friendly Housing Toolkit provides an invaluable resource to address the most common challenges that housing providers face in offering pet-friendly housing, including pet agreements and pet care resources for tenants. By setting up both housing providers and tenants for success, this toolkit helps ensure that people and pets have access to the secure, long-term housing that everyone needs.”
FIRST UNITED and the BC SPCA are not the only ones calling for these important changes:
- Representative polling conducted on behalf of the BC SPCA in 2022, 2024 and 2025 indicated that the majority (over 60%) of British Columbians want the provincial government to take action on pet-friendly housing.
- In 2023, the Union of BC Municipalities, which serves as a common voice for B.C.’s local governments, and the provincial Select Standing Committee on Finance and Government Services called for the provincial government to engage with housing stakeholders to find solutions to increase the availability and affordability of pet-friendly housing while providing appropriate protections for landlords.
Both charities call on British Columbians to contact their MLA to urge them to follow through on the government’s promise to create more pet-friendly housing across the province. We also encourage everyone to share the toolkit with their landlord, strata or housing provider to help start a pet-friendly housing conversation.