Chip Wilson's $18M Assessment Victory Reveals How BC Values Ultra-Luxury Real Estate—and What It Means for Your Property Taxes
Share
News article poster

The B.C. Property Assessment Appeal Board has ordered a dramatic $18.3 million reduction in the assessed value of Chip Wilson's Vancouver waterfront estate at 3085 Point Grey Road, lowering the 2025 valuation from nearly $82.7 million to $64.4 million. In a decision dated May 28, panel chair Audrey A. Suttorp ruled that B.C. Assessment had overvalued the 1,460-square-metre mansion by relying too heavily on construction costs rather than actual market behavior. Wilson, who founded Lululemon Athletica, had argued the property's true market value was closer to $55 million as of July 2024, citing the unique challenges of selling ultra-luxury assets where buyer pools are extremely limited.

The ruling provides rare insight into how assessment boards evaluate trophy properties that defy standard valuation methods. Wilson's 2013-built residence sits on a lot nearly 3,000 square metres with 57 metres of waterfront, featuring a tennis court, outdoor pool, hot tub, and unobstructed views of Burrard Inlet, English Bay, and the North Shore mountains. B.C. Assessment had initially valued the property based on its physical attributes and replacement costs, but the board emphasized that "there is no reason to ignore market behaviour, including price point sensitivity" when determining value. This marks a significant shift for what had long been listed as British Columbia's most expensive home.
yanqing zhao Commentary
From a senior Greater Vancouver agent's perspective, this ruling highlights a reality we see in the field: the ultra-luxury market operates on its own logic, where scarcity doesn't always equal liquidity. Wilson's win isn't about a billionaire gaming the system—it's about the assessment board acknowledging that a $55 million buyer pool is fundamentally different from a $70 million one. For clients in Point Grey, Shaughnessy, or West Vancouver's waterfront, this means assessments may finally start catching down to where actual offers are landing. Watch whether this triggers a wave of appeals from owners of unique estates, and whether B.C. Assessment adjusts its methodology for one-of-a-kind properties before the next valuation cycle.