Ajax Town Council has approved a new development charge (DC) deferral program aimed at supporting purpose-built rental housing while safeguarding critical infrastructure funds for the growing Durham Region municipality.
The initiative comes as municipalities across Ontario grapple with balancing the need for more housing against the revenue requirements that fund essential services and infrastructure. Unlike some communities that have chosen to waive or reduce development charges outright, Ajax is taking what it describes as a more sustainable, long-term approach.
Under the current framework, developers building purpose-built rental projects are required to pay development charges upon occupancy, with the first six instalments structured as interest-free payments. The newly approved program expands this timeline significantly, allowing developers to stretch their payments well beyond the initial interest-free period. However, instalments that fall outside the interest-free window will be subject to interest calculated at the prime rate plus an additional town premium.
The deferral program is designed as a two-year initiative and comes with specific conditions intended to ensure developers remain committed to actually building. Requirements include agreed-upon timelines for construction milestones, ensuring that participants have what council described as meaningful “skin in the game.” Only purpose-built rental projects qualify for the program, a targeted approach that addresses the thousands of rental units currently in Ajax’s development pipeline.
The move reflects growing pressure on municipalities to find creative ways to stimulate housing construction amid rising material costs, labour shortages, and elevated borrowing rates that have slowed projects across the Greater Toronto Area. By offering more flexible payment terms, Ajax hopes to jumpstart stalled housing starts while still collecting the development charges that fund roads, water systems, transit, and community facilities.
Council members were emphatic that protecting the collection of development charges remains a top priority. The charges represent a significant revenue stream that helps fund the infrastructure needed to support Ajax’s rapidly growing population, which has been among the fastest-rising in Durham Region over the past several years.
In addition to spurring construction, the program is designed to help unlock bonus funding available from other levels of government. Federal and provincial housing programs often tie funding to demonstrated progress on housing starts, meaning that getting shovels in the ground sooner could translate into additional financial support for the town.
The program also has the potential to accelerate projects to the point where they begin generating new tax revenue for the municipality. Completed rental buildings contribute to the tax base, creating a cycle that supports further investment in community infrastructure and services.
Council has committed to reviewing the program in six months to evaluate its uptake and overall effectiveness. The check-in will allow councillors to assess whether the deferral terms are achieving the desired balance between supporting housing supply and protecting the town’s financial position.
The initiative has been framed as a responsible compromise, one that acknowledges the legitimate challenges facing developers without sacrificing the revenue Ajax needs to manage its growth. As rental housing demand continues to climb across Durham Region, the program positions Ajax as a municipality willing to work with builders while maintaining fiscal discipline.
For residents, the hope is that the program translates into more rental units reaching completion sooner, helping ease the tight housing market that has made finding affordable accommodation increasingly difficult across Ajax and the broader Durham Region.



















