Sunday, June 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Slashing development fees is not a cure-all for housing affordability: CMHC

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2026 10:35 AM
  • Slashing development fees is not a cure-all for housing affordability: CMHC

Slashing municipal development charges would not be enough on its own to make homes affordable again across Canada, says a new analysis from the federal housing agency.

Development charges are fees cities impose on developers that are mainly used to pay for infrastructure that supports new builds.

The federal government is spending billions of dollars to encourage municipalities to cut development fees in half to boost housing supply and improve affordability.

The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.'s chief economist Mathieu Laberge published a report Wednesday that says reducing or eliminating development charges could increase the number of viable projects, but the numbers vary by city.

Targeting those fees is not a cure-all for Canada's housing affordability woes, he found.

"Reducing or even eliminating development charges wouldn’t solve the housing crisis facing Canada," Laberge wrote.

"While it may incent greater supply, the increase is not enough to reach pre-pandemic affordability levels in many cities."

Toronto would see a boost of more than 10 per cent to the number of viable projects if development charges were cut by 90 to 100 per cent, the CMHC projections say. That increase moderates to roughly five per cent with a 50 to 60 per cent reduction to development charges.

Burnaby, B.C. would see the biggest bump, with a 14 per cent increase in viable projects following the near-elimination of development charges. In the same scenario, Ottawa would only see a three per cent increase in the number of viable projects.

Laberge said development fees have a place in some cities' fiscal plans, given their modest influence on housing supply.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada commits $270M to Ukraine as Carney addresses European summit in Armenia

Canada commits $270M to Ukraine as Carney addresses European summit in Armenia
Canada will contribute another $270 million to help Ukraine secure critical military capabilities in its defence against Russia’s full-scale invasion, Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Monday.

Canada commits $270M to Ukraine as Carney addresses European summit in Armenia

One arrested after unauthorized aircraft access at Vancouver airport

One arrested after unauthorized aircraft access at Vancouver airport
Police say a person has been arrested after they "accessed an aircraft without authorization" at Vancouver International Airport.

One arrested after unauthorized aircraft access at Vancouver airport

Mark Carney calls alleged privacy breach in Alberta deeply concerning

Mark Carney calls alleged privacy breach in Alberta deeply concerning
An Edmonton city councillor says he and his team are helping a woman facing intimate partner violence relocate with her children after her address was leaked in an alleged privacy breach by a separatist group.

Mark Carney calls alleged privacy breach in Alberta deeply concerning

Joly unveils $1.5 billion in tariff relief after Trump ratchets up trade war

Joly unveils $1.5 billion in tariff relief after Trump ratchets up trade war
The federal government is announcing $1.5 billion in tariff relief in response to the United States widening its tariff criteria last month.

Joly unveils $1.5 billion in tariff relief after Trump ratchets up trade war

Two dozen heat records fall across B.C. as wildfire risks climb

Two dozen heat records fall across B.C. as wildfire risks climb
Warm weather across British Columbia broke daily temperature records in at least 24 locations this weekend, with several spiking above 30 C.

Two dozen heat records fall across B.C. as wildfire risks climb

Eby says Burnaby, B.C., hospital expansion will go ahead, despite cancelled contract

Eby says Burnaby, B.C., hospital expansion will go ahead, despite cancelled contract
British Columbia Premier David Eby says plans for a hospital expansion in Burnaby are not dead, despite the government announcing this week that the construction contract had been cancelled. 

Eby says Burnaby, B.C., hospital expansion will go ahead, despite cancelled contract