Will the motion pass?
A live AGM vote counter for BC strata corporations. Pull this up on whatever device is in front of you at the meeting, configure the room once, and tap as the votes come in. We compute quorum, the pass threshold for the resolution type you've picked, and the live count — with Strata Property Act citations on every threshold.
Runs in your browser. Nothing is stored or sent to us.
The room
Tap as the votes come in.
Configure the room above to see the pass threshold.
The relevant SPA sections for this resolution.
Three patterns the calculator deliberately doesn't model.
Unit entitlement weighting
A few rare resolutions are voted by unit entitlement (s. 56(3)) — most commonly, some special-levy allocations under specific bylaws. The default in BC is one vote per lot. Check your bylaws if you suspect this applies.
Two owners on one lot
Co-owners share a single vote (s. 54). If they can't agree, neither can vote and the lot is effectively absent. For counter purposes, count one vote per lot regardless of how many owners are on title.
Proxy procedural rules
A valid proxy is in writing, signed, names the proxy holder, and is delivered before voting starts. Some bylaws add their own proxy form requirements. Verifying proxies is a chair function — count them once accepted.
This is a working framework.
We model the default voting framework under the BC Strata Property Act. Custom bylaws can modify some of these thresholds; the strata plan and standing owner agreements can affect how proxies and unit entitlement are counted. For contested or material resolutions, a short BC strata-lawyer consultation is the right call.
The articles that go deeper.
The treasurer onboarding piece covers the AGM mechanics in context. The council year calendar puts the AGM in its operating-year context. The CRT research guide is useful for reading prior disputes about whether a vote was properly held.