Skid Steer Attachment Dealers in BC: Where to Buy
British Columbia's equipment market is split between the densely populated Lower Mainland — where you can comparison-shop dealers in an afternoon — and the rest of the province, where distances are real and freight is a line item in every equipment budget. This guide maps the dealer landscape by region, notes what's available where, and covers the realities for Island and North buyers.
BC's Fractured Geography Creates a Fractured Market
The Lower Mainland and Fraser Valley together hold more than half of BC's population — and a disproportionate share of its equipment dealers. Once you cross the mountains, the Coquihalla, or the Strait of Georgia, your options shrink. That's not a criticism; it's a geographic reality that shapes how buyers in Kamloops, Prince George, or Courtenay approach equipment sourcing differently than buyers in Langley.
Canada-Focused Guide — Written for Canadian buyers. Prices in CAD. Dealer references reflect the Canadian market (HLA Attachments, TMG Industrial, Brandt, Nortrax, Rocky Mountain Equipment, etc.). Last reviewed: March 2026.
BC's attachment demand also spans an unusually wide range of applications: forestry, agriculture, construction, marine, municipal, landscaping, and more. What dealers stock reflects local demand — so an Interior dealer near Williams Lake will carry different inventory than one near Delta's industrial corridor.
Lower Mainland and Fraser Valley
Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley are where BC's dealer network is strongest. You have full OEM dealer representation for every major brand, competitive independent dealers, and access to Ritchie Bros. and other auction activity.
Major OEM Dealer Presence
- Finning Canada — CAT dealer with significant BC presence including Lower Mainland locations. Full CAT Work Tools attachment lineup, industrial and construction focus. Excellent for high-duty applications in construction and heavy industry.
- Brandt Tractor — John Deere dealer with BC operations. Strong agricultural focus in the Fraser Valley where JD equipment is common.
- Rocky Mountain Equipment — Case and New Holland dealer with BC presence covering the Lower Mainland and Interior. Good for Case SR/SV operators.
- Bobcat dealers — Authorized franchise dealers in the Lower Mainland area. Landscaping and light construction drive strong Bobcat demand here; dealers are typically well-stocked on Bobcat-compatible attachments for these applications.
- Kubota dealers — Lower Mainland has strong Kubota dealer coverage. For SSV75/SSV65 or larger Kubota skid steer operators, authorized Kubota attachment sources are accessible here.
Fraser Valley: Agricultural Attachment Demand
The Fraser Valley runs from Abbotsford to Chilliwack and supports BC's most intensive agricultural zone — berry farms, dairy, greenhouse operations, and general crop production. Attachment dealers here tend to carry more agricultural-focused inventory: manure forks, bale spears, dirt buckets, post drivers. This is also a good market for used attachments, as farms upgrade equipment on normal cycles and used items enter the resale market regularly.
Check Kijiji and Facebook Marketplace for Fraser Valley private sales. Agricultural equipment in decent condition sells at reasonable prices in this market — a used pallet fork set or a light-duty grapple for farm work won't break the bank here if you're patient.
Interior BC: Kamloops, Kelowna, and the Okanagan
The Interior has decent dealer coverage, though it thins compared to the Lower Mainland. Kamloops and Kelowna are the main hubs. Both cities have major OEM brand representation through dealer networks that serve a large surrounding area.
Interior BC application mix leans toward agricultural (Okanagan orchards, vineyard work, ranching), construction, and some forestry at the margins. Attachment inventory tends to reflect this — buckets, forks, grapples, and orchard-specific tools are more common than heavy forestry mulchers or industrial-grade breakers.
Okanagan orchard note: Vineyard and orchard operations often use compact skid steers in tight rows. If you're buying attachments for trellis work, orchard floor management, or frost fan access, confirm the attachment width fits your access constraints before ordering. A 72-inch bucket doesn't fit in a 6-foot vine row. See our vineyard and orchard attachment guide for specifics.
Northern BC: Prince George and Beyond
Prince George is northern BC's equipment hub. It's the logical sourcing point for buyers from Vanderhoof to Fort St. James to McBride. The city has OEM dealer presence — Finning and Brandt both serve the north — though inventory depth on specialty attachments can be limited.
North of Prince George, the options contract quickly. Buyers in the Peace River country of BC (Dawson Creek, Fort St. John) are actually better served by Alberta dealers in Grande Prairie than by anything in the BC system — the Alberta dealer network is larger and the road connections are direct.
Forestry Attachment Considerations in Northern BC
Northern BC skid steer operators in or adjacent to forestry face different attachment needs than anywhere else in Canada. Mulchers, stumpers, slash buckets, and timber grapples are standard equipment in this market, and dealers serving this area know it. Ask specifically about high-flow hydraulic attachments if your machine is used in forestry applications — the power requirements are significantly higher than general construction. Our standard vs high-flow guide explains the tradeoffs.
Vancouver Island
The Island's main equipment markets are Victoria and the Comox Valley / Campbell River corridor. Getting equipment to the Island adds ferry cost and complexity — typically via BC Ferries or Tsawwassen/Duke Point. That adds an implied freight cost to anything purchased from mainland dealers, and it shapes how Island buyers think about inventory and contingency.
Island dealers tend to be smaller than mainland equivalents. Selection for common attachments is adequate; for specialty or high-flow hydraulic attachments, you may need to order from the mainland or through a dealer's network. Factor the ferry crossing into your delivery timeline — a 3-day mainland order becomes a 5-day Island delivery when ferry scheduling is involved.
Used attachment availability on the Island is moderate. Victoria has some used equipment market activity; the north Island is limited. Nanaimo's central location makes it a reasonable hub for mid-Island buyers, and Ritchie Bros. occasionally holds Island-accessible auction activity.
BC Brands and Availability Summary
| Brand | BC Region Availability |
|---|---|
| CAT Work Tools (via Finning) | Lower Mainland, Interior, North — good province-wide |
| John Deere (via Brandt/Cervus) | Lower Mainland, Fraser Valley, some Interior |
| Case / New Holland (Rocky Mountain) | Lower Mainland, Interior |
| Bobcat (franchise) | Lower Mainland, some Interior cities |
| HLA Attachments | Ships direct from Ontario; available province-wide via freight |
| Paladin / McLaren | Through independent dealers; Lower Mainland and Interior |
The Island and North Premium: Planning Around It
BC buyers outside the Lower Mainland face an implicit cost premium on attachments — not because dealers are gouging, but because freight, ferry, and logistics add up. A few ways to manage it:
- Consolidate orders. One freight shipment with two attachments costs less per unit than two separate shipments.
- Plan seasonally. Ordering attachments in March for spring work is smarter than ordering in April when demand peaks and lead times stretch.
- Explore used inventory at mainland auctions. The savings on a well-maintained used grapple or mulcher from a Lower Mainland Ritchie Bros. yard can easily absorb the ferry and freight cost.
- Ask about dealer-to-dealer transfers. If your local dealer doesn't stock what you need, they can often arrange a transfer from a larger dealer in their network — usually cheaper than sourcing it yourself cross-province.