British Columbia has more than 22,000 licensed security workers under the Ministry of Public Safety, yet most buyers can't tell a well-trained guard from a warm body in uniform. If you're hiring security guards for a site in Surrey, Vancouver, Burnaby, or anywhere across the Lower Mainland, the difference shows up the moment something goes wrong. This guide explains what's actually included, what training looks like, and what fair pricing should be in 2026.
Key Takeaways
- Every guard in BC must hold a Security Worker Licence issued by the Security Programs Division — verify the licence number before signing.
- Realistic hourly rates in 2026 sit between $22 and $45 depending on shift length, post type, and certifications.
- Rapid response in the Lower Mainland should average 15-30 minutes; anything longer signals dispatch issues.
- The best providers customize patrol routes, reporting, and escalation — a one-size brief is a warning sign.
Security guards protect people, property, and assets through visible deterrence, access control, incident response, and documented reporting. In BC, a typical shift includes scheduled patrols, monitoring entry points, verifying credentials, responding to alarms, de-escalating disputes, and filing detailed incident logs that hold up in court or insurance reviews.
The role is broader than most people assume. A condominium concierge greets residents, screens visitors, and coordinates with strata councils. A construction guard logs every vehicle entering the site and inspects perimeters every two hours. A retail loss prevention officer watches floor behaviour, intercepts theft, and writes evidence-grade reports. Each post has a different success metric.
Key insight: A guard's most valuable output isn't muscle — it's the documentation trail. Clean, time-stamped logs protect you during insurance claims and WorkSafeBC investigations.
Every working security guard in British Columbia must hold a Security Worker Licence issued by the Security Programs Division of the Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General. To qualify, applicants complete a 40-hour Basic Security Training (BST) course approved by the Justice Institute of British Columbia, pass a provincial exam, and clear a criminal record check.
The licence comes as a physical card with a photo, expiry date, and unique number. You can verify any guard's status through the provincial registry. Reputable companies also carry a Security Business Licence — the corporate counterpart — and maintain WorkSafeBC clearance in good standing. We recommend reading our breakdown on security guard licensing Canada for the full pathway.
By the numbers: BC's Security Services Act requires licence renewal every five years, with mandatory use-of-force and de-escalation refreshers for any guard handling intervention duties.
The five most-requested guard types in BC are static (stationary post), mobile patrol, concierge, fire watch, and specialty (construction, event, retail loss prevention). Each maps to a different risk profile, and choosing the wrong type is the single biggest cause of failed contracts — paying for a concierge when you needed a mobile patrol simply doesn't catch perimeter breaches.
| Guard Type | Best For | Typical Coverage |
|---|---|---|
| Static guard | Lobbies, gates, single high-value site | 8-24 hours/day |
| Mobile patrol | Multi-site portfolios, parking lots | Hourly drive-throughs |
| Concierge | Condominiums, corporate offices | Front-desk shifts |
| Fire watch | Sprinkler outages, hot work | 30-minute rounds |
| Construction | Active builds, vacant lots | Nights + weekends |
For sites with multiple properties under one management group, mobile patrol security typically delivers the best cost-to-coverage ratio. For active builds, construction site security is non-negotiable once materials hit the lot.
In 2026, professional security guard rates in British Columbia range from $22 to $45 per hour. Unarmed static guards typically bill $24-$32/hr, concierge $26-$34/hr, mobile patrol $30-$40/hr per visit, and specialty fire watch or event coverage $35-$45/hr. Rates below $20/hr almost always indicate non-compliant pay, high turnover, or unlicensed staff.
Pricing varies based on shift length, location, certifications required (first aid, OFA Level 1, advanced security training), and minimum hours. Most providers require a four-hour minimum per dispatch. For a deeper look at line items and what drives the number up or down, see our security guard cost guide.
Bottom line: If a quote looks 25% cheaper than the rest, ask how they're paying guards above BC's $17.85 minimum wage while covering WorkSafeBC premiums, insurance, supervision, and admin.
In the Lower Mainland and Fraser Valley, mobile and alarm response times should average 15-30 minutes during off-hours and 10-20 minutes during the day. On Guard Security dispatches from Surrey with coverage across Vancouver, Burnaby, Richmond, Langley, and Abbotsford, and our average alarm response on overnight calls is under 25 minutes.
Response time isn't just a marketing number — it's a function of how many supervisors are on the road, how dispatch routes calls, and whether the provider has local depth. National chains often re-route through out-of-province dispatch centres, adding minutes. For alarm-only sites, our alarm response security services add a physical eyes-on layer to monitoring contracts.
Pick a security provider based on five measurable criteria: licensing verification, insurance coverage ($5M general liability minimum), training depth, local supervision, and reporting transparency. Ask for a sample post order, a redacted incident report, and proof of WorkSafeBC clearance. Any provider who hesitates on these is hiding something operationally important.
At On Guard Security, every new hire completes one full week of one-on-one training with a senior officer before solo deployment. We're locally owned in Surrey, our supervisors live in the communities they serve, and we provide written post orders for every site. If you've worked with a provider before and aren't sure whether to switch, our checklist on signs need new security company walks through the warning signals.
Key insight: The strongest predictor of service quality isn't price — it's supervisor-to-guard ratio. Ask. The industry benchmark is one supervisor per 15-20 active guards.
Watch for four warning signs: unwillingness to share licence numbers, sub-$20/hr quotes, no written post orders, and refusal to provide local references. These four together describe roughly the bottom 20% of the BC market — and they're responsible for the majority of failed contracts, theft incidents on watch, and insurance disputes.
A reputable company will hand you proof of licensing, insurance, and a sample shift report on the first call. They'll also tell you what they can't do — for instance, no licensed unarmed guard in BC has arrest powers beyond any citizen. Honest scope-setting is a green flag. For more hiring traps to dodge, see hiring security firm mistakes.
For property managers juggling multiple sites — residential towers, retail, and commercial — a single integrated property management security contract typically beats stitching together three separate vendors.
On Guard Security Ltd. has protected commercial, residential, and industrial sites across Surrey, Vancouver, Burnaby, Langley, Abbotsford, and the wider Fraser Valley since 2014. Our guards are JIBC-trained, Ministry of Justice licensed, and WorkSafeBC compliant. We don't bury you in call centres — when you call, you reach someone who actually knows your site.
Call 778-990-5070, email info@onguardsecurityltd.ca, or request a no-obligation site walk-through at onguardsecurityltd.ca. We'll show up, listen, and quote honestly.
Copyright © 2019. - All Rights Reserved