1. Before You Move — The Pre-Arrival Checklist

Some things can and should be started before you physically arrive on Vancouver Island. Getting ahead on these will save you weeks of frustration in your first month.

💡 Moving from a specific province? We have dedicated provincial moving guides elsewhere on the site covering province-specific quirks like AHCIP vs OHIP cancellation, insurance history transfers, and tax implications.

2. BC Services Card — Your Master Key

The BC Services Card is your combined health card and (optionally) photo ID in British Columbia. It's the first thing to apply for, because you need it (or at least the MSP enrolment behind it) to access healthcare. If you get a BC driver's licence, that card doubles as your BC Services Card — you don't need two separate cards.

How to Get It

1Enrol in MSP (see section 5 below) — this triggers your BC Services Card eligibility
2Visit an ICBC driver licensing office (Service BC offices also handle this in some locations)
3Bring: two pieces of ID (one must have photo), proof of BC address, your MSP confirmation
4Photo taken, card mailed to you in 2–3 weeks
📌 Combined card vs separate card If you're getting a BC driver's licence anyway, your licence IS your BC Services Card — it has both functions built in. You don't need to apply separately. If you don't drive, you'll get a standalone BC Services Card (no extra cost).
DetailInfo
CostFree (the BC Services Card itself has no fee)
Processing time2–3 weeks by mail after in-person visit
Where to applyAny ICBC driver licensing office or Service BC location
Required IDTwo pieces of ID — passport, birth certificate, PR card, or current provincial licence
MSP wait periodCoverage begins after a waiting period (up to 3 months for out-of-province moves; see MSP section)

3. ICBC Driver's Licence Swap

British Columbia requires you to swap your out-of-province licence within 90 days of establishing residency. The process is handled by ICBC (Insurance Corporation of British Columbia), and it's generally painless if you come from another Canadian province — no written test, no road test.

From Another Canadian Province

If you hold a full Class 5 (or equivalent) licence from any Canadian province or territory, you can swap it directly:

From Outside Canada

It depends on your country. Drivers from the US, UK, Australia, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Switzerland, Austria, France, and several other countries with reciprocal agreements can exchange directly (no tests). Others may need to take a knowledge test and/or road test. Check ICBC's website for the full country list.

⚠️ Don't let it expire first If your out-of-province licence expires before you swap it, you may need to take the knowledge and road tests — even if you're from another Canadian province. Swap it within 90 days or while it's still valid, whichever comes first.

ICBC Office Locations on Vancouver Island

LocationAddressNotes
Victoria1150 McKenzie Ave, VictoriaBusiest office on the Island — book ahead
Nanaimo6475 Metral Dr, NanaimoUsually less wait than Victoria
Courtenay367 6th St, CourtenaySmaller office, shorter waits
Campbell River1340 Shoppers RowSmall office, can be quick
Duncan5791 Allenby Rd, DuncanServes Cowichan Valley area
Port Alberni3636 4th Ave, Port AlberniLimited hours — check before going

Cost summary: $17 licence swap fee + $31 for a new photo (total around $48). Knowledge test is $15 if required; road test is $50.

4. Vehicle Registration & Insurance

BC is unique in Canada: vehicle insurance is mandatory through ICBC (the public insurer). You can add optional coverage from private insurers, but the basic coverage goes through ICBC. You must register and insure your vehicle within 30 days of establishing BC residency.

Steps to Register an Out-of-Province Vehicle

Insurance Costs — What to Expect

ICBC basic insurance (mandatory third-party liability) for a typical vehicle runs approximately $1,800–$2,400 per year for a driver with a clean record and maximum discount. New-to-BC drivers without ICBC claims history start at a lower discount level, so your first year may be $2,200–$3,000+. Bringing a claims-free letter from your previous insurer can help — ICBC recognizes up to 9 years of claims-free driving from other provinces.

💡 Save money on insurance Get that claims history letter from your current insurer BEFORE you cancel your old policy. ICBC will apply your out-of-province claims-free years to your BC discount, which can save you hundreds per year. Without it, you start at the base rate.

For a deeper look at car and transportation costs, see our cost of living breakdown.

5. MSP Health Coverage Enrollment

MSP (Medical Services Plan) is BC's public health insurance. It covers medically necessary doctor visits, diagnostic tests, and hospital stays. As of January 2020, MSP premiums were eliminated — there is no monthly fee. But you still need to enrol.

How to Enrol

The Waiting Period

This is the part that trips people up. When you move to BC from another province, MSP coverage typically starts on the first day of the third month after you establish residency. For example:

⚠️ Bridge the gap During the MSP waiting period, you're not covered by BC health insurance. Your previous province's coverage ends when you leave (or within a specific timeframe — Ontario gives you to the end of the month after departure; Alberta gives you 3 months). Make sure you understand the overlap. If there's a gap, consider private health insurance for those weeks. Blue Cross or similar providers offer short-term individual plans for around $80–$150/month.

MSP costs nothing — no premiums since 2020. But you still need Pharmacare enrollment (separate) if you want prescription drug coverage, and MSP doesn't cover dental, vision, or physiotherapy. For a full picture, read our healthcare on Vancouver Island guide.

6. Finding a Family Doctor (GP)

This is probably the single most difficult item on this list. Vancouver Island, like most of British Columbia, has a serious shortage of family doctors. As of 2026, approximately 20% of Island Health region residents do not have a regular GP. The situation is slowly improving — BC's new payment model for family doctors (introduced in 2023) has attracted some physicians — but demand still far outstrips supply.

What to Do

📌 Realistic expectations In Victoria and the South Island, wait times for a family doctor through the registry are typically 6–18 months. In smaller communities like Port Alberni, Campbell River, or Tofino, it can be longer — or occasionally faster if a new physician arrives. Retirees and families with young children should budget for using walk-in clinics for the first year.

For community-by-community healthcare info, see our healthcare guide.

7. BC Hydro & FortisBC Utilities

Setting up utilities on Vancouver Island is straightforward, but which company you deal with depends on where you live and what kind of heating your home uses.

BC Hydro (Electricity)

Almost all of Vancouver Island gets electricity from BC Hydro. The exception is a few areas served by FortisBC (mainly parts of the interior, not typically Vancouver Island).

FortisBC (Natural Gas)

If your home uses natural gas for heating, hot water, or cooking, you'll deal with FortisBC. Not every Vancouver Island home has gas — many are all-electric, especially newer builds with heat pumps. Gas service is available in Victoria, Nanaimo, Parksville, Qualicum Beach, Duncan, Courtenay, and some surrounding areas, but NOT in more rural or remote communities.

Water & Sewer

Water and sewer services are handled by your municipality — not BC Hydro or FortisBC. In most cases, water costs are included in your property taxes (for homeowners) or in your rent. If you're buying, the municipal office can tell you the annual water/sewer cost, typically $500–$900/year. Some rural properties on wells have no water bill — but well maintenance and pump replacement are on you.

8. Internet & Cell Service by Region

Internet quality varies dramatically across Vancouver Island. Victoria and Nanaimo have fibre and cable options comparable to any Canadian city. Once you get north of Courtenay or head to the West Coast (Tofino, Ucluelet, Port Alberni), your options narrow considerably.

Major Providers by Region

RegionBest OptionsTypical SpeedMonthly Cost
Victoria / SaanichTelus (fibre), Shaw/Rogers, Starlink150–940 Mbps$75–$115
Nanaimo / ParksvilleTelus (fibre in most areas), Shaw/Rogers75–940 Mbps$70–$110
Comox Valley / CourtenayTelus (fibre expanding), Shaw/Rogers75–750 Mbps$70–$105
Campbell RiverTelus, Shaw/Rogers, CityWest in some areas50–300 Mbps$65–$100
Duncan / CowichanTelus (fibre available in town), Shaw/Rogers75–750 Mbps$70–$110
Tofino / UclueletTelus (DSL/wireless), Starlink15–100 Mbps$80–$140
Port AlberniTelus, Shaw/Rogers50–300 Mbps$65–$100
North IslandTelus (limited), Starlink, local WISPs10–150 Mbps$80–$140
💡 Remote workers: check before you commit If your income depends on reliable internet, verify the exact address — not just the town — with Telus and Shaw/Rogers before signing a lease. "Fibre available in Courtenay" doesn't mean every street in Courtenay has fibre. Starlink ($140/month + $499 equipment) is a genuine backup for rural properties.

Cell Service

Telus and Rogers/Fido have the best coverage on Vancouver Island. Bell piggybacks on Telus's network in BC. Freedom Mobile has very limited Island coverage (basically Victoria only). Expect dead zones on Highway 4 to Tofino, parts of the North Island logging roads, and the more remote sections of the West Coast. If you're moving from a big city, this will be an adjustment.

9. Canada Post & Mail Forwarding

Getting your mail sorted out is more important than most people realize — your old address will receive government notices, tax documents, and bank statements for months after you move.

📌 Address format matters If you're moving to a rural area with a civic address (like many properties on the North Island or West Coast), make sure your address is registered with Canada Post. Some new builds or subdivisions don't show up in Canada Post's system immediately — call your local post office to confirm.

10. Banking — Setting Up or Switching

If you already bank with one of the Big Five (RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC), you probably don't need to switch — your accounts work nationwide. But branch access varies by community, and some people prefer a local credit union.

Banking Options on Vancouver Island

InstitutionBranches on VINotes
Island Savings (now First West Credit Union)Multiple across VILocal credit union, strong community presence, good for mortgages
Coastal Community Credit Union20+ locationsLargest credit union on the Island, very popular with locals
TD Canada TrustVictoria, Nanaimo, CourtenayLimited outside larger centres
RBC Royal BankVictoria, Nanaimo, Duncan, CourtenayDecent coverage in main towns
ScotiabankVictoria, Nanaimo, Courtenay, Campbell RiverReasonable coverage
BMOVictoria, NanaimoSparse outside Victoria
CIBCVictoria, Nanaimo, CourtenayModerate coverage
💡 Credit unions are big on the Island Coastal Community Credit Union and Island Savings / First West are widely used on Vancouver Island. They often have better mortgage rates than the Big Five, more local branches (especially in smaller towns), and community investment programs. If you're buying property, it's worth getting a quote from a credit union alongside your bank.

11. School Registration for Families

If you're moving with kids, school registration is usually straightforward — but timing matters, especially if you're arriving mid-year or your preferred school has limited spots.

Public School Districts on Vancouver Island

DistrictArea ServedContact
SD61 — Greater VictoriaVictoria, Saanich, Esquimalt, Oak Bay250-475-4106
SD62 — SookeSooke, Langford, Colwood, Metchosin250-474-9800
SD63 — SaanichSidney, North Saanich, Central Saanich250-652-7300
SD68 — Nanaimo-LadysmithNanaimo, Ladysmith, Gabriola250-754-5521
SD69 — QualicumParksville, Qualicum Beach, Errington250-248-4241
SD70 — AlberniPort Alberni, Bamfield, Ucluelet250-720-2770
SD71 — Comox ValleyCourtenay, Comox, Cumberland250-334-5500
SD72 — Campbell RiverCampbell River, Quadra Island250-830-2300
SD79 — Cowichan ValleyDuncan, Lake Cowichan, Shawnigan Lake250-748-0321
SD84 — Vancouver Island WestGold River, Tahsis, Zeballos250-283-2241
SD85 — Vancouver Island NorthPort Hardy, Port McNeill, Alert Bay250-949-6618

Registration Steps

For more on education options — including French Immersion, outdoor education programs, and post-secondary — see our education & families guide.

12. Pet Registration & Licensing

If you have dogs or cats, most Vancouver Island municipalities require you to licence them. It's a municipal bylaw, not provincial — so the rules and costs vary by city.

Dog Licensing by Municipality

MunicipalityAnnual Cost (spayed/neutered)Annual Cost (intact)Notes
Victoria$30$60Register through CRD Animal Services
Saanich$30$60CRD Animal Services
Nanaimo$25$50SPCA partnership for enforcement
Courtenay$25$50Comox Valley Regional District
Campbell River$20$40City hall or online
Duncan / North Cowichan$25$50CVRD animal control
📌 Wildlife awareness for pet owners Vancouver Island has cougars, bears, and eagles that can pose risks to pets, especially small dogs and cats. Many Island residents keep cats indoors or in "catios" (enclosed outdoor spaces). If you're in a more rural area — Sooke, the Cowichan Valley, the North Island — this is a genuine consideration, not paranoia.

13. Voter Registration

Once you're a BC resident, you should update your voter registration for both provincial and federal elections.

Federal Elections (Elections Canada)

Provincial Elections (Elections BC)

Municipal Elections

14. The First 90 Days — Master Timeline

Here's a realistic timeline for getting everything set up, organized by priority. Some of these can happen in parallel; others depend on completing earlier steps first.

🗓️ Week 1 — The Essentials

🗓️ Weeks 2–4 — The Government Gauntlet

🗓️ Weeks 4–8 — Settling In

🗓️ Month 3+ — Full BC Resident

💡 Don't forget your taxes The year you move, you'll file taxes as a BC resident (based on where you lived on December 31). BC has different provincial tax rates and credits than other provinces. If you moved from Alberta, you'll notice BC has higher income tax rates but no health premiums.

Quick Reference: Key Phone Numbers & Websites

ServicePhoneWebsite
MSP Enrollment1-800-663-7100gov.bc.ca/msp
ICBC (Driver Licensing)1-800-950-1498icbc.com
BC Hydro1-800-224-9376bchydro.com
FortisBC1-888-224-2710fortisbc.com
Service BC1-800-663-7867gov.bc.ca
HealthLink BC (Doctor Registry)8-1-1healthlinkbc.ca
Canada Post (Mail Forwarding)1-866-607-6301canadapost.ca
Elections Canada1-800-463-6868elections.ca
Elections BC1-800-661-8683elections.bc.ca
BC Ferries1-888-223-3779bcferries.com

Cost Summary: What All This Costs

Here's what to budget for the administrative side of moving to BC. These are approximate 2026 figures:

ItemCost
BC Driver's Licence swap~$48 (licence fee + photo)
Vehicle inspection$100–$150
Vehicle registration transfer~$36 (registration + plates)
ICBC basic insurance (annual)$1,800–$3,000+ (varies widely)
MSP enrollmentFree
BC Services CardFree
Bridge private health insurance (2–3 months)$160–$450
Canada Post mail forwarding (12 months)$92.55
Dog licence (annual)$20–$60
BC Hydro security deposit$0–$400 (refundable)
Total one-time setup costs (excluding insurance)~$450–$1,200

For the full picture on living costs — rent, groceries, transportation, and more — see our cost of living guide.

📌 One last thing Moving is stressful. The bureaucratic side is genuinely tedious. But once you're through the first 90 days — MSP active, licence swapped, kids in school, internet working — you can focus on the reason you moved here in the first place. The hiking. The ocean. The slower pace. That first salmon you catch off the dock. It's worth the paperwork. Welcome to the Island.