How Alberta’s Newest Condo Law Changes Affect Operations at Red Haus
Alberta made a significant round of changes to the Condominium Property Act and its regulations, most of which took effect in February 2026. A recent legal briefing delivered by McLeod Law walked through what is new. Here is a plain-language summary of the pieces most likely to touch you as a Red Haus owner or resident.
A NEW PLACE TO RESOLVE DISPUTES
The province is launching a Condominium Dispute Resolution Tribunal (CDRT), expected to begin accepting cases in April 2026. It is meant to be a faster, less formal, and less expensive alternative to court for certain condo disputes. To start, its authority is limited to a few areas: monetary sanctions (and whether they were issued properly), access to corporation documents, and matters connected to annual and special general meetings. The province plans to review and likely expand that scope after the first year.
A few practical notes:
• There is a one-year window to bring a matter, measured from when you knew or reasonably should have known about the dispute.
• Filing fees begin at $150, with additional fees if a matter proceeds to adjudication or extended mediation. The Tribunal Chair can waive fees in cases of financial hardship.
• The Tribunal is funded by an annual fee of $9 per unit (including parking and storage units), beginning at the end of 2026. For a community of our size, this becomes a modest recurring line in the operating budget, and the Board will account for it accordingly.
CHANGES TO CHARGEBACKS
A “chargeback” is the mechanism for recovering the corporation's costs when something an owner does, or fails to do, forces the corporation to repair, replace, maintain, or protect property. The amount is capped at the lesser of the actual costs (plus reasonable related services) or the insurance deductible.
The new rules add a clear, fair process:
• The Board must give written notice of a proposed chargeback within 90 days of becoming aware of the issue. That notice will name the owner and unit, describe what happened, estimate the amount, and set a deadline for the owner's written response.
• The Board can only formalize the chargeback by resolution after that response deadline has passed.
• A separate Statement of Chargeback then follows, setting out the amount, how to pay, and the payment deadline.
• Owners have 30 days from the Statement of Chargeback to appeal.
The takeaway for owners: you will always be told in writing, given a chance to respond, and given a route to dispute the amount.
HOW VOTING WORKS AT MEETINGS
A few small clarifications are worth knowing before the next general meeting:
• An owner vote is one vote per owner. If a unit has more than one owner, each owner votes. If you own more than one unit, you still get one vote.
• A unit factor vote is weighted by unit factors. Any eligible voter can request a unit factor vote before the result of an owner vote is announced.
• A corporation that owns a unit can now cast a vote on a special resolution, voting with the majority.
STRONGER PROTECTION FOR YOUR VOLUNTEER BOARD
The updated Act reinforces protection for board members. If someone sues a director for something done in good faith on the corporation's behalf and the claim fails, the court can order that person to pay the director's legal costs on a full (solicitor-and-client) basis. In plain terms, this discourages meritless claims against the volunteers who give their time to run our community.
A FEW HOUSEKEEPING ITEMS
• Insurance deductibles: The corporation can recover up to the amount of its insurance deductible from an owner after an insured loss, and it does not have to file an insurance claim first to do so.
• Selling your unit: Estoppel certificates and information statements now carry additional details, including any proposed chargeback against the unit and information on unit factors. If you are selling, your lawyer will see these.
• New-build inspections: The new “technical analysis” requirement for newer buildings does not apply to Red Haus, as it only affects condominiums first occupied on or after February 15, 2026.
As always, this is a friendly overview rather than legal advice. If you have questions about how any of these changes affect your unit, please reach out to the Board, and we will point you to the right resource.
Source: Summary based on a legal briefing presented by McLeod Law.