Buying a Farm in BC: ALR, Zoning & Land Use Explained | Fraser Valley Guide

Buying a Farm in BC: What Most Buyers Get Wrong About ALR, Zoning & Land Use

Buying a farm or acreage in British Columbia—especially in the Fraser Valley—can look straightforward on the surface.

You find a property. It has land. Maybe a house. Maybe a barn.

But what most buyers don’t realize is this:

You’re not just buying land—you’re buying restrictions, limitations, and long-term constraints that can directly impact how you use the property.

And this is where costly mistakes happen.

At Farms In BC Real Estate Group, we see it often—buyers committing to properties before fully understanding ALR rules, zoning limitations, and actual land usability.

This guide will help you avoid that.


🌱 What Is ALR (And Why It Matters More Than You Think)

The Agricultural Land Reserve (ALR) is one of the most misunderstood parts of buying a farm in BC.

Most buyers assume:

“If it’s farmland, I can use it how I want.”

That’s not how it works.

What ALR Actually Means in Real Terms:

Where Buyers Get It Wrong:


🧭 Zoning vs ALR: The Confusion That Costs Buyers Thousands

One of the biggest mistakes buyers make is confusing zoning with ALR designation.

They are not the same—and both matter.

Zoning Controls:

ALR Controls:

Why This Matters:

You might find a property where:

Or the opposite:

If you don’t understand both together—you’re making decisions with incomplete information.


🚜 “Looks Usable” Doesn’t Mean Usable

This is where a lot of lifestyle buyers get caught.

A property may:

But in reality:

The Land Might Have:

Real Risk:

Buyers purchase based on appearance—then realize:


📍 Fraser Valley Reality: Why Location Changes Everything

Not all farmland in Fraser Valley behaves the same.

Example Differences:

Langley:

Abbotsford:

Chilliwack:

Delta:

Same price range ≠ same value.


⚠️ The Most Common Buyer Mistakes

Here’s what we consistently see:

1. Buying Based on the House

The home is often the smallest part of the long-term value.

2. Skipping Proper Due Diligence

Relying on listing info instead of deeper investigation.

3. Assuming Future Flexibility

Planning uses that aren’t actually permitted.

4. Underestimating Costs

Drainage, upgrades, and compliance can add up quickly.

5. Choosing the Wrong Property for Their Goals

Lifestyle vs income vs long-term investment gets mixed up.


🧠 How to Approach Buying a Farm the Right Way

Before making an offer, you should have clarity on:

This is where working with a farm-specific real estate team becomes critical.


🤝 Why Specialized Guidance Matters

Farm transactions require more than basic real estate knowledge.

You need:

At Farms In BC, our role is to help you: