Why Your Contractor Won't Start Without It
Under WorkSafeBC's Occupational Health & Safety Regulation, before renovation or demolition work begins, the owner must ensure a qualified person has identified any hazardous materials — asbestos chief among them — that the work might disturb; buildings constructed before 1990 are presumed likely to contain them, which is why surveys are standard on older homes. This isn't a formality. Since 2024, asbestos abatement in BC is a licensed activity, WorkSafeBC enforcement has real teeth, and reputable contractors simply will not open a wall in an older home without a survey report in hand.
In practice this means the survey is now a standard line item in every older-home renovation in the Fraser Valley — as routine as a building permit. The homeowners who get burned are the ones who find out on demo day, when the crew stops work and the schedule slips by weeks. Getting the survey done before you finalize your renovation timeline keeps you in control.
What the Survey Covers
A pre-renovation survey is scoped to your project. We inspect the areas your renovation will disturb and sample the suspect materials in them, commonly:
- Drywall joint compound in walls and ceilings being opened or removed
- Textured or popcorn ceiling coatings
- Flooring layers — vinyl tile, sheet flooring, and mastic adhesives
- Insulation around ducts, pipes and in attics (including vermiculite)
- Plaster, stucco and parging
- Lead-containing paint where relevant to the scope
Every sample is documented by location and analyzed at an accredited BC laboratory. Your report maps each material, states its asbestos content, and — critically — is written to satisfy both your contractor's WorkSafeBC obligations and your municipality's permit requirements.
What Happens After the Report
If everything comes back clean: you hand the report to your contractor and your renovation proceeds. Done.
If asbestos is found: only the materials your project disturbs matter. Sometimes the plan can be adjusted to leave a positive material alone. When removal is needed, it must be done by a WorkSafeBC-licensed abatement contractor — we can refer you to licensed local firms and, if you want certainty, perform independent clearance testing after the abatement so you know the space is genuinely clean before your renovation crew returns.
Frequently Asked Questions
My contractor asked for a "hazmat survey" — is that this?
Yes. A pre-renovation hazardous materials survey identifies asbestos and other regulated materials (like lead paint) in the areas your renovation will disturb. Contractors ask for it because WorkSafeBC requires it before they can legally start work on a pre-1990 building.
Does the whole house need to be surveyed?
No — a renovation survey is scoped to the areas and materials your project will actually disturb. Gutting a bathroom needs far fewer samples than taking a house down to the studs. That is why renovation surveys cost less than full pre-demolition surveys.
My house was built after 1990. Do I still need this?
Usually a much lighter process — 1990 is the screening threshold WorkSafeBC uses because asbestos building products had largely left the Canadian supply chain by then, but it is not a legal exemption: the duty to identify hazardous materials before work still applies. For newer homes that is often a quick review rather than full sampling, and any part of the structure that predates 1990 (an older foundation, an addition) still warrants testing.
What does a survey cost?
Most residential pre-renovation surveys in the Fraser Valley run $350–$600 depending on the size of the renovation and the number of distinct materials to sample. We quote a firm price up front after a short phone call.
How long until I can start my renovation?
Sampling usually takes under an hour on site, and lab results are back in 24–48 hours. Most homeowners have their report — and a green light — within two to three business days of calling.