Understanding the changes to BC’s consumer protection laws
(Updated June 2026)
There have been recent changes to the consumer protection laws we oversee in BC. Some of these changes are already in force, but majority of them come into effect August 1, 2026.
This information has been created for businesses to promote awareness and understanding of any obligations and to support compliance with the updated requirements.
The guidance below will:
- Help you understand if your business is impacted by the changes
- Provide a summary of whatâs changing
- Offer transition guidance
- And explain our approach to compliance
The new changes to the law will affect you if your business takes part in any of the following practices.
Does your business do any of the following?
- Sell goods or services online, over the phone, or by email or fax
- Sell goods or services that your customers donât get right away or donât pay in full upfront
- Enter contracts for the supply of goods or services in person at a place other than your permanent place of business, such as the customerâs home
- Provide services geared toward flexibility, strength, aerobic capacity, or physical fitness, such as gym memberships, ski passes, sports camps, personal training, self-defense, dance lessons, etc.
- Sell goods or services on a continuing basis, like a subscription
- Enter timeshare contracts where consumers acquire the right to use property for periods of time along with other participating consumers
If the answer is âyesâ to any of the situations above, upcoming changes to the law are likely to have implications for your contracts and business practices.
This updated information is intended to provide a more detailed summary of the changes to help you understand what to expect as a business.
This material is not a legal interpretation and should not be relied upon as legal advice. We encourage any businesses who may be impacted by the changes to seek professional legal advice to ensure compliance with the laws.
Pre-contract disclosures
Before a consumer agrees to buy, businesses must provide specific information upfront. This information must be provided clearly, at no cost, and before the consumer enters a contract.
Which contracts are affected?
These preâpurchase disclosure requirements apply to common types of consumer contracts, including:
- Purchases made online, over the phone, by email or fax (distance sales contracts)
- Contracts for goods or services delivered in the future or where a consumer does not pay in full up front, and the total is over $50 (future performance contracts)
- Fitness and personal services contracts such as gym memberships, ski passes, sports camps, fitness classes, and personal training
- Goods or services sold on a continuing basis, such as subscription contracts
- Door-to-door sales (direct sales contracts)
- Timeshare contracts
Read section 17 of the amended Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act (unofficial) and the amended Consumer Contract Regulation for the legal definition of each type of consumer contract.
Information that must be disclosed before a consumer completes a purchase
Before a consumer agrees to buy, businesses must clearly explain:
- The supplierâs legal name and, if different, the business name
- A detailed description of the goods or services to be supplied, including any relevant technical or system specifications (if applicable)
- Delivery details (if applicable), including:
- the method of delivery
- the delivery location
- If the goods or services will not be provided at the time the contract is made:
- the date they will be provided or supplied, and
- the date they will be fully completed (if applicable)
- An itemized purchase price
- Any additional costs that can be determined in advance, including taxes and shipping charges;
- Any additional costs that cannot reasonably be determined in advance, such as:
- customs duties
- brokerage fees
- Where payment is in a non-Canadian currency:
- the currency that applies
- The terms of payment, including:
- the payment schedule
- the amount of each payment (if payments will be in installments)
- The total price, including any cost of credit
- Details of any trade-in, including its value (if applicable)
- If credit is provided or arranged by the business:
- a description of any security interest
- Details of any promotional offers, including:
- eligibility requirements
- duration
- terms that apply once the offer ends
- Any other terms, conditions, limitations, or restrictions
- Return, exchange, cancellation, and refund policies
- If the contract includes renewal terms:
- how renewal may occur
- whether the contract renews automatically
- For door-to-door sales contracts, fitness contracts and time share contracts: a prescribed notice of cancellation rights
Read sections 18.2 and 18.3 of the amended Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act (unofficial) for more information.
An important detail about return, exchange, cancellation, and refund policies
Even if a business does not have these policies, they must disclose that in the pre-contract disclosures and the contract itself.
Giving consumers a chance to review the contract or get a copy
Businesses must also give consumers an opportunity to review the full contract before the sale is completed. If a consumer asks for a copy of the contract, it must be provided promptly.
Consumer cancellation rights
If the required preâpurchase disclosures are not provided, or if they do not match the final contract, the consumer may have the right to cancel.
Read section 18.3 of the amended Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act (unofficial) for more information
More consistent contract requirements
The law creates more consistent disclosure requirements across all consumer contract types. This means most consumer contracts will now need to include a common set of required information.
Contract requirements
In addition to the pre-contract disclosures listed above, contracts must clearly include:
- The supplierâs legal name and, if different, the business name
- The date the contract is entered into
- If the supplier is registered under the Motor Dealer Act, their registration number
- A detailed description of the goods or services to be supplied, including any relevant technical or system specifications (if applicable)
- Delivery details (if applicable), including:
- the method of delivery
- the delivery location
- If the goods or services will not be provided at the time the contract is made:
- the date they will be provided or supplied, and
- the date they will be fully completed (if applicable)
- An itemized purchase price
- Any additional costs that can be determined in advance, including taxes and shipping charges;
- Any additional costs that cannot reasonably be determined in advance, such as:
- customs duties
- brokerage fees
- Where payment is in a non-Canadian currency:
- the currency that applies
- The terms of payment, including:
- the payment schedule
- the amount of each payment (if payments will be in installments)
- The total price, including any cost of credit
- Details of any trade-in, including its value (if applicable)
- If credit is provided or arranged by the business:
- a description of any security interest
- Details of any promotional offers, including:
- eligibility requirements
- duration
- terms that apply once the offer ends
- Any other terms, conditions, limitations, or restrictions
- Return, exchange, cancellation, and refund policies
- If the contract includes renewal terms:
- how renewal may occur
- whether the contract renews automatically
- For door-to-door sales contracts, fitness contracts and time share contracts: a prescribed notice of cancellation rights
Providing a copy of the contract
Businesses entering consumer contracts are required to provide a copy of the contract to the consumer.
Businesses should understand the rules about when to give a copy of the contracts, depending on the contract type:
- For goods or services that your customers donât get right away or donât pay in full upfront (future performance contracts): within 15 days after the contract is entered into.
- For fitness or other personal services contracts: within 15 days after the contract is entered into.
- For subscription contracts: within 15 days after the contract is entered into.
- For time share contracts: at the time the contract is entered into.
- For goods or services sold online, over the phone, or by email or fax (distance sales contracts): within 15 days after the contract was entered into.
- For door-to-door sales contracts (direct sales contracts): at the time the contract is entered into.
Businesses should review their contract templates to ensure all required information is included and to ensure they understand consumerâs cancellation rights.
Read sections 18.1 and 18.2 of the amended Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act (unofficial) for more information
New rules for subscription contracts
The law introduces new rules for subscription contracts. These are whatâs called âfuture performance contractsâ for the supply of goods or services on a continuing basis and when the total price is $50 or more, such as:
- Streaming services subscriptions
- Food and meal kit delivery subscriptions
- News and media subscriptions, such as newspapers, cloud storage, etc.
- Shopping and consumer goods subscriptions, such as beauty products, clothing, childrenâs toys, etc.
- And others
Fitness contracts are addressed separately in another section.
Cancellation rights for automatic renewals
The new rules apply to automatic renewals in subscription contracts.
A contract canât automatically renew, and such terms are void, unless it meets requirements for cancellation and notice. The law speaks to a consumerâs right to cancel based on the renewal period:
- For renewals of 60 days or less: Consumers must be able to cancel at any time, before or after renewal, without fees or penalties. They will not receive a refund of the unused portion of the subscription.
- For renewals longer than 60 days: Consumers must be able to cancel at any time, before or after renewal. Consumers must receive advance notice of the renewal and have clear cancellation and refund rights. If the consumer is entitled to a refund, it must be prorated based on the unused portion of the contract. The refund must be issued within 15 days and future payments must be cancelled within 30 days.
Read section 25.1 of the amended Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act (unofficial) for more information.
Unilateral changes to subscription terms
Some subscription contracts say a business can unilaterally change the terms of a contract. This means the business makes changes to the terms without the participation or agreement of the consumer. These terms are only valid if the following rules are met:
- The contract clearly explains, from the start, which terms the business may change.
- The business gives proper notice of any changes and explains the consumerâs right to cancel.
- A business generally cannot change cancellation, return, exchange, or refund terms without the consumerâs agreement if the change gives the consumer more responsibility or reduces the businessâs responsibility.
If a unilateral change negatively affects the consumer, the consumer can cancel the contract at any time without penalty. For example, if the change means the consumer has to pay more or receive less.
Read section 25.2 of the amended Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act (unofficial) for more information
Ban on high pressure door-to-door sales of certain products
A door-to-door sale is typically considered a direct sale. It has a value of more than $50 and is entered in person, usually at a consumerâs home (or somewhere other than the supplierâs permanent place of business).
The law prohibits the sale of certain household products and services through doorâtoâdoor sales. This includes items such as:
- Furnaces, heat pumps, and air conditioners
- Duct cleaning services
- Water heaters and water treatment devices
- Home security systems
- Solar panel systems
- Energy or window audits
Businesses cannot
- Sell a part or related service for any of these items through door-to-door sales.
- Offer, arrange, or extend credit as part of any direct sales contract. Consumers may still choose to use their own credit cards, but credit cannot be arranged by the seller.
If a prohibited door-to-door sale happens
- The contract is not binding on the consumer
- Any related credit agreement is also not binding
Exceptions
There are limited situations where these restrictions do not apply, including:
- When a consumer invites a business to their home
- Sales by certain licensed and regulated sellers
- Sales at temporary locations (such as trade shows)
Even if an exception applies, other consumer contract requirements may still apply.
Read sections 18.1, 18.2, 18.3, 20(1), 20.1 and 21 of the amended Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act (unofficial) and Divisions 2 and 3 of the amended Consumer Contracts Regulation (unofficial) for more information
New rules for fitness contracts
Contracts for services such as gym memberships, ski passes, sports camps, fitness classes, and personal training are now referred to as fitness or personal services contracts.
What counts as a fitness or other personal services contract
This new category applies to ongoing services related to physical fitness, including:
- Activities designed to improve flexibility, strength, or aerobic fitness
- Instruction, training, or support provided to consumers, either one-on-one or in a group setting.
Other contract requirements
- These contracts are still considered future performance contracts and must follow those requirements under the law.
Most existing rules, including required contract information, cancellation rights, and how refunds are calculated have not significantly changed.
Read sections 18.2, 18.3, 18.4, 23, 24 and 25 of the amended Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act (unofficial) and sections 2, 2.1, 3 and 7 of the amended Consumer Contracts Regulation (unofficial) for more information
Prohibited unfair contract terms
Certain unfair contract terms are already prohibited (as of March 31, 2025) in consumer contracts and, if included, are void. These include terms that:
- Prevent consumers from joining class action lawsuits
- Stop consumers from posting reviews
- Include mandatory dispute resolution mechanisms to resolve disputes
In contracts between businesses, the rules are different. Dispute resolution and class action clauses are only effective in claims over $5,000. While a contract cannot force dispute resolution for smaller claims, both businesses can still agree to use it once a dispute arises.
Read sections 14.1, 14.2, 14.3 and 14.4 of the amended Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act (unofficial) for more information
Consumer contracts
Most of the changes to the law take effect on August 1, 2026. These updates affect the consumer contracts covered above such as purchases made online or over the phone, subscriptions, door-to-door sales, in-person contracts for goods or services to be supplied in the future, and timeshares.
Which rules apply depends on when the contract was signed.
- Contracts signed or renewed on or after August 1, 2026 must follow the updated law.
- Contracts signed before that date follow the rules that were in place at the time.
The contract date is what matters, not when services are provided, payments are made, or a complaint is filed. For businesses, this means the changes apply after August 1, 2026. Existing contracts do not need to be updated just because of the changes. However, any new contracts entered or renewed on or after August 1, 2026 must meet the new requirements.
Unfair contract terms
Some unfair contract terms are already prohibited. For example, rules about unfair contract terms have been in place since March 31, 2025, which means:
- Contracts signed on or after March 31, 2025 must follow the updated law.
- Contracts signed before that date follow the rules that were in place at the time.
Read sections 203.001, 203.002 and 203.003 of the amended Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act (unofficial) for more information.
Our role
Our role is to administer, enforce, and provide education on the law. We focus on helping businesses and consumers understand their rights and responsibilities and supporting compliance with the updated requirements. Decisions about changes to the law, including policy intent and timelines, are made by government.
Compliance and enforcement
We are a risked-based regulator. We typically focus first on education and voluntary compliance. Generally, when we receive a complaint or identify an issue, we will start by working with the business to explain the requirements and give them an opportunity to fix the problem. If a business does not come into compliance, we may take further enforcement action, depending on the situation.
Support for businesses
Businesses can start preparing by:
- Reviewing contracts and key disclosures
- Checking renewal, cancellation, and refund processes
- Making sure relevant staff understand the new rules
Read the amendments in full
For a full and complete understanding of the law, businesses should review the unofficial consolidations of the amendments. These consolidations combine the changes to the legislation and related regulations into a single, updated, and more readable version of the law. This is the best place to review the amendments in their complete form:
- Bill 4 â Business Practices and Consumer Protection Act (unofficial)
- Business Practices and Consumer Protection Regulation (unofficial)
- Consumer Contracts Regulation (unofficial)
- Debt Collection and Repayment Regulation (unofficial)
- Home Inspector Licensing Regulation (unofficial)
Read the Notice of Amendments for additional background and a summary of the changes.
Do you have questions?
The guidance offered here was created for the purpose of orienting businesses to the upcoming changes. This is not intended to be legal interpretation and should not be relied upon as legal advice.
We encourage any businesses with specific questions related to their business, and how it may be impacted by the changes, to seek professional legal advice to ensure compliance with the laws.

