The Procedural Rulebook Behind the Numbers
The fee and assessment headlines are the visible surface. The structural change is that Alberta's Condominium Property Act and its companion Condominium Property Regulation were both amended effective February 15, 2026 — the most consequential update to the day-to-day mechanics of condominium operations in years. Three changes matter most for owners reviewing 2026 documents.
Chargebacks now require a formal 90-day notice and a 10-day response window. According to an Edmonton legal bulletin from Reynolds Mirth Richards & Farmer LLP, a corporation must serve an owner with a notice of proposed chargeback no later than 90 days after the board became — or should have become — aware of the act or omission triggering the cost. The notice must identify the unit and owner, describe the act or omission, give an estimated amount, and set a written-response deadline of at least 10 days (excluding holidays). Only after that deadline, or after considering an owner's response, can the board pass a resolution levying the chargeback. The owner then has 30 days to appeal to court. Boards that don't follow this process now risk having the chargeback held unenforceable.
Estoppel certificates must now disclose any proposed chargeback where a notice has been served on the unit. That is the change that matters most to anyone buying, selling, or evaluating risk on a Calgary condo unit this year. Previously, a proposed chargeback could be in motion without showing up on the formal document a buyer relies on to assess the unit's financial state. As of February 2026, it must. The estoppel certificate is no longer just a snapshot of fees, arrears, and payment schedule — it is now also the disclosure point for in-flight chargeback proceedings.
Fidelity insurance is now sized against the actual fund balances. The Act amendments set the minimum fidelity coverage at the sum of the corporation's reserve fund balance and operating account balance at the start of the fiscal year. Boards can no longer write a lower number into the bylaws. The practical implication is straightforward: the larger your building's reserve fund (which is what owners want), the larger the insurance coverage protecting it. It's a small change that quietly raises the standard of governance integrity around the money the reserves are accumulating.
Owners now also have a non-court channel for disputing many of these decisions. Alberta's Condominium Dispute Resolution Tribunal opened in April under the same legislative package, giving more than 500,000 Alberta condo owners a specialized forum for governance disputes. It is not a financial backstop, but it lowers the cost of pushing back when a board's communications about reserves, budgets, or chargebacks don't add up.