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Housing crisis demands tax relief on new home construction

Vaughan, ON, Feb. 19, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- A three-year HST holiday on new home construction is needed to boost Ontario’s battered housing sector. That is the ask the Residential and Civil Construction Alliance of Ontario (RCCAO) and the Residential Construction Council of Ontario (RESCON) are making of the Government of Ontario and federal government. The policy is backed by economic analysis conducted by the Canadian Centre for Economic Analysis (CANCEA) and shows it would be statistically revenue neutral for all governments.


High taxes on new home construction in Ontario are worsening the province’s housing crisis. The Government of Ontario must take urgent action to provide meaningful tax relief to jumpstart the collapsed housing sector.


The CANCEA research supporting the policy found that a three-year HST holiday would:


  • Help preserve skilled trade jobs and have builders constructing new housing supply.

  • Create economic urgency in the market to incentivize buyers to purchase new homes.

  • Be revenue-neutral for all governments.


“Ontario’s housing crisis is worsening and prolonged job-losses risk adding to long-term problems plaguing the sector,” said Nadia Todorova, executive director of RCCAO. “The men and women in the skilled trades need to see urgent government action to improve market conditions in the sector so they can get back to building desperately needed homes across Ontario. A three-year sales tax holiday does just that by saving 26,000 direct industry jobs”


“Our governments tax homes at the same level of alcohol and tobacco. We need fast action to provide tax relief to kickstart Ontario’s housing industry back into building,” said Richard Lyall, president of RESCON. “A three-year HST holiday would help reverse market conditions devastating the industry and support $3.9 billion of GDP to Ontario’s economy.”


RCCAO and RESCON say their call should be heeded swiftly and enacted through the upcoming 2026 provincial budget, with the federal government moving in lockstep. The federal government also needs to see Bill C-4 passed in the Senate of Canada and given royal assent.


Click here to read the CANCEA economic analysis.

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