All Bills Bill C-4 ยท Tax Cut Bill C-9 ยท Hate Crimes Bill C-12 ยท Immigration Bill C-26 ยท Housing Bill C-30 ยท Economic Update Bill C-31 ยท Budget Bill C-22 ยท Lawful Access Bill C-27 ยท Self-Government
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๐Ÿ”ด Live
Bill C-26 ยท Housing Supply Payments Act ยท Second Reading
Bill C-30 ยท Spring Economic Update 2026 ยท Committee (House)
Bill C-4 ยท Making Life More Affordable for Canadians Act ยท Royal Assent March 12, 2026
Bill C-31 ยท Budget 2025 Implementation Act, No. 2 ยท Second Reading
Bill C-12 ยท Strengthening Canada's Immigration System and Borders Act ยท Royal Assent March 26, 2026
Bill C-9 ยท Combatting Hate Act ยท Passed Senate June 4, 2026
Bill C-22 ยท Lawful Access Act ยท Committee (House)
11 Legislatures Monitored ยท Federal + All 10 Provinces
Bill C-26 ยท Housing Supply Payments Act ยท Second Reading
Bill C-30 ยท Spring Economic Update 2026 ยท Committee (House)
Bill C-4 ยท Making Life More Affordable for Canadians Act ยท Royal Assent March 12, 2026
Bill C-31 ยท Budget 2025 Implementation Act, No. 2 ยท Second Reading
Bill C-12 ยท Strengthening Canada's Immigration System and Borders Act ยท Royal Assent March 26, 2026
Bill C-9 ยท Combatting Hate Act ยท Passed Senate June 4, 2026
Bill C-22 ยท Lawful Access Act ยท Committee (House)
11 Legislatures Monitored ยท Federal + All 10 Provinces
โ† All Bill Breakdowns
๐Ÿ  Housing Active. Before Parliament

The Housing Supply Payments Act

Ottawa authorizes payments to provinces that lower housing fees and speed up permits. The aim: get more homes built, faster. Introduced March 26, 2026. (The $1.7B figure often cited comes from a related fiscal announcement, not the bill text.)

Housing
Federal transfer
March 2026
Introduced
2nd Reading
Current stage
What it is
Bill C-26 authorizes payments from the federal Consolidated Revenue Fund to provinces that agree to cut the fees and waiting times that slow new home construction. The idea is simple: take away the things that make building a new home slow and expensive, and more homes will get built. (The $1.7 billion figure widely reported comes from a separate fiscal announcement, not the bill text itself.)
Who it affects
Anyone who rents or hopes to buy a home. Home builders, city halls, and provincial housing departments see the most direct effect. The bill is aimed at hot markets like Toronto, Vancouver, and Calgary, where there aren't enough homes and prices have hit record highs.
What changes
If a province cuts its development fees and shortens its permit timelines below the federal targets, it qualifies for payments under this Act. The money has to go toward housing — things like roads, water lines, and land for new neighbourhoods.
Where it stands
The bill cleared first reading in the House of Commons on March 26, 2026. It has since reached second reading, but no second-reading debate has taken place yet — that’s the stage where MPs debate the big-picture idea before sending it to a committee for a closer, line-by-line look.
Pros & Concerns
๐Ÿ‘ Pros
Tackles the housing shortage head-on. Pushes provinces to cut red tape without forcing them. Could speed up building in the cities where homes are needed most.
๐Ÿ‘Ž Concerns
Critics say the reported funding isn't enough for a problem this big. Provinces don't have to take part. Some cities worry that lower fees mean less money for local services like parks, transit, and roads.
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