No HST + Ontario Development Charges Cut 50%: What It Means for You
March 30, 2026 is a date Peterborough real estate investors and homebuyers won’t forget. Prime Minister Mark Carney and Ontario Premier Doug Ford jointly announced an $8.8 billion federal-provincial investment to slash municipal development charges by 50% for three years — the most significant housing policy shift Canada has seen in a generation.

If you’ve been watching the Peterborough real estate market — or waiting on the sidelines for the right moment to build or buy — this announcement changes the math in a big way.
What Are Development Charges — and Why Do They Matter?
Development charges (DCs) are fees that municipalities collect from builders and developers to help fund the infrastructure needed to support new homes: roads, water, sewers, parks, transit. In theory, it makes sense. In practice, those costs get passed directly to homebuyers — and they’ve ballooned into one of the biggest invisible barriers to housing affordability in Ontario.
In Peterborough, development charges on a new single-detached home can easily add $50,000–$80,000 or more to the cost of a build before a single nail is hammered. Multiply that across dozens of units in a subdivision or multi-residential project, and you’re looking at serious money — money that makes otherwise viable projects unviable, or forces developers to price buyers out of the market.
The $8.8B Announcement: What Was Announced on March 30, 2026
Here’s what Carney and Ford announced in plain terms:
- $8.8 billion joint federal-provincial fund to compensate municipalities for cutting development charges by 50%
- 3-year program — municipalities that participate will receive funding to offset lost DC revenue
- Priority funding for early movers — cities and towns that have already reduced or waived development charges get first access to the compensation pool
- Stacks with the HST removal — the federal government already eliminated HST on new homes, saving buyers up to $130,000 on qualifying purchases
Together, these two policies represent a fundamental repricing of new construction in Ontario. The question isn’t whether this matters — it’s how fast the market adjusts.
What This Means for Development Charges in Peterborough
Peterborough has been one of the faster-growing mid-sized cities in Ontario, fuelled by affordability-seekers priced out of the GTA and a strong local economy. But growth comes with pressure, and development charges have been a growing pain point for local builders.
Under this new program:
- If Peterborough opts in and cuts DCs by 50%, a project that previously carried $600,000 in development charges could see that number drop to $300,000
- That difference flows directly into project feasibility — making previously marginal developments viable
- Municipalities that move quickly to reduce charges and apply for federal-provincial compensation funds gain a competitive edge for attracting development dollars
Watch for City of Peterborough council motions and budget amendments in the coming weeks. The municipalities that move first stand to attract the most new development investment.
New Homes in Ontario Just Got Cheaper — Here’s the Combined Impact

Let’s stack the savings to show the real impact on new home affordability in Ontario:
| Policy | Estimated Savings |
|---|---|
| HST removal on new homes | Up to $130,000 |
| 50% DC reduction (mid-size Ontario city) | $40,000–$80,000+ |
| Combined potential savings | $170,000–$210,000+ |
These aren’t marginal tweaks. This is a structural shift in the cost basis for new housing across Ontario — and it has direct implications for buyers, builders, and investors alike.
Ontario Housing Policy 2026: Why This Moment Is Different
We’ve seen housing announcements come and go. But several factors make this one worth taking seriously:
1. It’s Backed by Real Money
$8.8 billion isn’t a press release — it’s a compensation fund designed to remove the single biggest excuse municipalities have had for keeping DCs high: lost revenue. By making cities financially whole, the federal and provincial governments are removing the friction that’s kept DC reform politically difficult at the local level.
2. It Incentivizes Speed, Not Just Compliance
The priority funding structure rewards municipalities that have already taken action on development charges. This creates a competitive dynamic among Ontario cities: the ones that move fast get more money. That’s a fundamentally different incentive structure than past housing programs, which tended to reward participation equally regardless of pace.
3. It Addresses Supply, Not Just Demand
Most housing affordability measures in recent years have focused on the demand side — first-time buyer credits, mortgage rules, etc. Cutting development charges is a supply-side intervention. It makes it cheaper to build, which means more homes get built, which is the only real long-term solution to the affordability crisis.
What Peterborough Real Estate Investors Should Do Now
If you’re active in the Peterborough real estate market — whether as a builder, developer, landlord, or investor — here’s how to position yourself ahead of the curve:
- Watch City Council. The first signals will come from Peterborough City Hall. Track council agendas for DC bylaw amendments and budget discussions. Early action by council means earlier access to provincial-federal compensation.
- Revisit stalled projects. If you’ve shelved a development or construction project because the numbers didn’t work, run them again. A 50% DC reduction could flip the feasibility on projects that were previously marginal.
- Lock in land while pricing adjusts. Markets take time to reprice. The window between a policy announcement and the market fully absorbing it is where sophisticated investors move.
- Factor in the HST savings. If you’re selling new builds, buyers now have significantly more purchasing power. Adjust your marketing to reflect the true all-in cost of a new home under the new policy environment.
- Consult your team. Tax implications, project structuring, and financing strategies all shift when the cost basis changes this significantly. Talk to your property management, legal, and financial advisors before making major moves.
The Bottom Line
The March 30, 2026 announcement by Carney and Ford represents the biggest recalibration of housing development economics in Ontario in decades. For Peterborough — a city already on a growth trajectory — this is a catalyst that could accelerate development timelines, attract new capital, and meaningfully improve housing affordability for buyers across the region.
The investors and builders who understand this shift and act decisively in the next 6–12 months will be the ones who look back at 2026 as a turning point.
Ready to Make the Most of Ontario’s New Housing Policy?
At Visture Property Group, we work with Peterborough investors, developers, and homeowners to navigate the real estate market with clarity and confidence. Whether you’re evaluating a new development, managing an existing portfolio, or looking to buy in a shifting market — our team is here to help.
Contact Visture today at visture.ca/lp/ to discuss how Ontario’s 2026 development charge changes could impact your real estate strategy.



