Your property taxes and user fees fund more than 100 services in the community – from clean water, road maintenance and fire protection services to the spectacular sea walk, parks and special events.
Property Taxes are due by 11:59 p.m. Wednesday, July 2, 2025.
Get all the information about property taxesby reading the 2025 Property Tax Infosheet.
Your annual tax notice includes both your property taxes and utility charges (water, sewer, and solid waste). This combined billing approach differs from many other communities, which issue separate utility bills.
It also includes funds that that the City collects on behalf of the school district, the province, the regional district, the public library and the hospital. Only about 65% of your property tax bill goes to the City. The remaining 35% is collected on behalf of these other government agencies.
Payment Options
Payment must be received by the City by 11:59 p.m. PDT on July 2, 2025.
- Cheque (including post-dated cheques), money order, debit card, or by online banking services.
- Credit card payments online via MyCity or in the office (subject to cost recovery fee currently at 2%).
- At your financial institution in person or through online banking. Allow banks two to three business days to process payments.
- In person at City Hall (drop box available after hours)
- By mail or courier to:
City of Campbell River, Tax Department
301 St. Ann’s Road
Campbell River, BC V9W 4C7
A responsible plan for today and the future
The City of Campbell River has approved its 2025–2034 Financial Plan, which includes a 2.89% property tax increase. For the average property owner, this means an additional $5.75 per month.
This increase supports over 100 essential services and funds more than 100 operational projects that keep our city running safely and efficiently.
How your tax dollars are used
In 2025, the City’s total operating budget is approximately $102.9 million. These funds support everything from roads and emergency services to recreation, transit, and waste collection.
More than $69 million is allocated for capital improvements, including:
- utility upgrades along Erickson Road
- the re-development of Nunns Creek Park for field users
- construction of the new John Heart water Reservoir
We’re also investing in Downtown safety and vibrancy, and planning for growth.
Keeping the tax increase low
The City faced significant cost pressures this year—primarily from increases in wages, policing, and transit. These increases alone could have pushed the tax increase to 9%.
To keep the increase low, City Council and staff found over $1.2 million in cost savings, while maintaining services, including:
- Reviewing financial assistance policies
- Adjusting some service levels
- Introducing new fees
- Using funds from the federal Housing Accelerator Grant to support development
Thanks to these efforts, the tax increase was reduced to 2.89%.
FAQs: General Payment Information
Launch MyCity
Make managing your property taxes a breeze! Register your account through MyCity to access notices instantly, securely and at any time, track payments, check your home owner grant status, and sign up for eBilling.
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Information about annual tax rates. Download documents detailing property tax rates for prior years. more...
Assessments, tax rates, annual tax notice, due date, penalty and payment information. more...
Link to API Canada tax certificates. more...