The Hendrix is a 30-storey, 260-unit apartment building at the south- eastern tip of Oliver, with a commanding view of the legislature and the river valley. When developer Henry Edgar sold the property shortly after completing construction in 2017, he says annual property taxes were about $564,750 or, as he puts it, $2,172 per door.
Fast forward to 2020, and Edgar’s development company, simply called Edgar, gets the tax bill for its latest project. The MacLaren is similar to The Hendrix — 27 storeys, 240 units, also in Oliver, also rental units — but when Edgar got his first tax bill in 2020, it was $829,000, or $3,454 per door. That’s a 59 per cent increase in just two years. “That represents an $8-million reduction in value at a time when the rental market is already down 25 per cent,” Edgar says. “And other operating costs, like utilities and insurance, are increasing as well. This matters because it affects the affordability for renters who need housing options downtown.”
The tax increase isn’t the result of any single decision by the City of Edmonton, but of a series of changes to the municipal tax code in the last few years. Brett Flesher is a real estate consultant with Altus Group and can talk valuations and mill rates with the best of them. He says the challenge for developers of rental buildings begins with the City’s property subclass of “other residential” properties, which includes anything with four or more rental units. He says that comes with an automatic 10 per cent tax increase over the residential rate applied to single-family homes and any building with up to three units.
Then there’s Edmonton’s “premium market” designation, which applies to rental high rises going up in the city’s three densest neighbourhoods: Oliver, Downtown and Garneau. Back in 2016, they were treated the same as any other multi-unit residential properties like row houses and low rises. But that year, out-of-province developers started paying more attention to the Edmonton market, and several paid above-market prices for high rises. In response — and this is where it gets a bit esoteric, but bear with me — the City-changed the gross income multiplier (GIM) that is applied to high rises. A GIM is a rough measure of the value of an investment property calculated by dividing the property’s sale price by its gross annual rental income.