$200,000 to $320,000. That’s what you’ll pay in municipal fees on a Vancouver multiplex before a single nail gets hammered, before framing starts, before your first trade shows up on site. And that’s just the government’s cut — it doesn’t include your architect, your engineer, or your construction costs.
I’ve watched developers model their proformas with construction costs down to the penny, then get blindsided by six separate fee categories they didn’t know existed. The density bonus alone can run $82,000 per unit on a wider lot. Metro Vancouver’s regional DCC is jumping 33% in 2026 and another 17% in 2027. And the payment terms? They’re not “pay at completion” — they start at permit issuance.
If you’re running a proforma for a Vancouver multiplex, the fee stack is where projects live or die. Here’s every dollar you’ll owe the city, with the exact rates and bylaws behind them.
Run your numbers instantly with our Vancouver Development Cost Calculator →
TL;DR — The Numbers That Matter
- City-wide DCL: $49.88/m² (Bylaw 9755, includes 20% reduction since Dec 10, 2025)
- Utilities DCL: $39.06/m² (Bylaw 12183, includes 20% reduction)
- Metro Vancouver DCC: $21,941/unit in 2025 → $29,197 in 2026 → $34,133 in 2027
- Density Bonus: $0/m² on ≤33ft lots, up to $1,506.95/m² on 50ft+ lots (Sub-area A)
- Building Permit: $729 base + tiered per-$1,000 of construction value
- Rental projects: $0 density bonus, 20% DCL reduction, no Community Amenity Contributions
- Total fee stack: $200K–$320K depending on lot width, unit count, and tenure
Fee #1: City-Wide Development Cost Levy (DCL)
Vancouver’s City-wide DCL funds parks, childcare, transportation, and housing infrastructure. It’s charged per square metre of gross floor area.
Current rate: $49.88/m² (Bylaw 9755)
This rate already reflects the 20% reduction that City Council approved on December 10, 2025. Before that date, the rate was $62.35/m². The reduction applies to all residential development — not just rental — and stays in effect until the City’s “Financing Growth” framework replaces it (expected Q2 2026).
On a 6-unit multiplex with 560 m² of buildable area, that’s roughly $27,933 in city-wide DCLs.
Fee #2: Vancouver Utilities DCL
Separate from the city-wide levy, the Utilities DCL covers water, sewer, and drainage infrastructure. Same calculation method — charged per square metre.
Current rate: $39.06/m² (Bylaw 12183, with 20% reduction applied)
Pre-reduction rate was $48.83/m². Combined with the city-wide DCL, you’re looking at $88.94/m² in total DCL charges. On that same 560 m² building, that’s $49,806 before you’ve touched a single other fee category.
Fee #3: Metro Vancouver Development Cost Charge (DCC)
This is the regional government’s fee, and it’s the one that’s climbing fast. Metro Vancouver charges DCCs per dwelling unit — not per square metre — which means it scales directly with your unit count.
| Year | Rate per Unit | 4-Unit Total | 6-Unit Total | 8-Unit Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | $21,941 | $87,764 | $131,646 | $175,528 |
| 2026 | $29,197 | $116,788 | $175,182 | $233,576 |
| 2027 | $34,133 | $136,532 | $204,798 | $273,064 |
That’s a 56% increase from 2025 to 2027. If you’re planning a 2027 build, you should be modelling at the 2027 rate today. The Metro Vancouver DCC alone on an 8-unit project will jump from $175K to $273K in two years.
These rates are set by Metro Vancouver (metrovancouver.org), not the City of Vancouver, and they apply across all member municipalities.
Model your exact DCC costs by unit count →
Fee #4: Density Bonus Contribution
This is the fee that catches people off guard. Vancouver’s Schedule F of the Zoning By-law divides the city into three sub-areas and charges density bonus contributions based on lot frontage.
Sub-areas:
- A — West of Oak Street (Point Grey, Dunbar, Kerrisdale, Shaughnessy)
- B — Oak Street to Fraser Street (Cambie, Riley Park, Kensington-Cedar Cottage)
- C — East of Fraser Street (Renfrew, Hastings-Sunrise, Killarney)
Density Bonus rates by lot width and sub-area:
| Lot Frontage | Sub-area A | Sub-area B | Sub-area C |
|---|---|---|---|
| ≤33 ft | $32.29/m² | $32.29/m² | $32.29/m² |
| 40–50 ft | $699.65/m² | $538.20/m² | $322.92/m² |
| 50+ ft | $1,506.95/m² | $1,076.39/m² | $645.84/m² |
The jump from a 33ft lot to a 50ft+ lot is massive. On a 50ft lot in Sub-area A with 700 m² of buildable area, the density bonus is $1,054,865. On a 33ft lot in the same neighbourhood? $22,603. That’s a 46x difference.
This is why lot frontage matters so much for Vancouver multiplex economics. A narrow lot isn’t just cheaper to buy — it’s dramatically cheaper to permit.
Fee #5: Building Permit Fees
Building permits in Vancouver use a tiered structure based on construction value:
- Base fee: $729
- Per $1,000 of construction value: tiered charges that step down as value increases
For a typical multiplex with $2.5M–$4.5M in construction value, expect building permit fees in the range of $15,000–$30,000. The exact amount depends on your construction budget, which the City will review against their own cost benchmarks.
Fee #6: Development Permit
Every multiplex requires a development permit for form and character review. The fee is approximately $5,000, though it can vary slightly depending on project complexity and whether you’re using a pre-approved housing catalogue design.
Development permits are separate from building permits and are typically processed first. Timeline: 8–16 weeks for standard multiplex projects.
The Comparison That Matters
Here’s what the full fee stack looks like across three common project types, all using 2026 rates:
| Fee Category | 4-Plex on 33ft Lot | 6-Plex on 50ft Lot (Sub-area B) | 8-Unit Secured Rental |
|---|---|---|---|
| City-wide DCL | $19,954 | $34,934 | $44,912 |
| Utilities DCL | $15,624 | $27,342 | $35,154 |
| Metro Van DCC | $116,788 | $175,182 | $233,576 |
| Density Bonus | $12,916 | $376,697 | $0 |
| Building Permit | ~$15,000 | ~$25,000 | ~$28,000 |
| Development Permit | ~$5,000 | ~$5,000 | ~$5,000 |
| Total | ~$185,282 | ~$644,155 | ~$346,642 |
Assumes 400 m² GFA for 4-plex, 700 m² for 6-plex, 900 m² for 8-unit. Density bonus at Sub-area B rates for 50ft lot. Rental project gets $0 density bonus.
Two things jump out from this table. First, the 6-plex on a 50ft lot in Sub-area B pays nearly $377K in density bonus alone — more than the entire fee stack of the 4-plex. Second, the 8-unit rental, despite being the largest project, pays less in total fees than the 6-plex strata because of the density bonus exemption.
This is why tenure choice changes everything in Vancouver. It’s not just about rent vs. sale prices — it’s about a $300K+ fee difference.
See how tenure choice changes your fee stack →
Waivers and Exemptions You Should Know
Vancouver offers several fee reductions that can dramatically change the math:
Rental = $0 Density Bonus. If you build secured rental (minimum 60-year covenant), you pay zero density bonus contribution. On a 50ft lot, that’s a savings of $377K–$1.05M depending on sub-area. This is the single biggest incentive the City offers.
Below-Market Units Are Exempt. Units designated as below-market rental are exempt from density bonus charges entirely. If you’re mixing market and below-market units, only the market units trigger the fee.
20% DCL Reduction (All Projects). The December 2025 DCL reduction applies to strata and rental alike. It saves roughly $13,000–$20,000 on a typical multiplex. It’s temporary — likely until the Financing Growth review completes — so don’t count on it forever.
No Community Amenity Contributions (CACs). Unlike rezoning projects, R1-1 multiplex developments don’t trigger CACs. This is a significant advantage over spot rezonings, which can carry $50,000–$150,000 in negotiated CAC payments.
Payment Terms: When You Actually Pay
City fees aren’t due all at once. Vancouver’s DCL payment schedule for multiplex projects:
- 1/3 at permit issuance — you pay this before construction starts
- 1/3 at 12 months after permit issuance
- 1/3 at 24 months after permit issuance
Metro Vancouver DCCs follow their own schedule and are typically collected at building permit issuance.
The staggered payment helps with cash flow, but don’t forget to model the first third into your pre-construction budget. On a $50K DCL total, that’s roughly $16,700 due at permit — money you need before your lender’s first construction draw.
The Bottom Line
Vancouver’s fee stack is complicated, but it’s also knowable. Every rate is published, every bylaw is public, and the math doesn’t change based on who your city planner is.
The developers who get burned aren’t the ones who can’t afford the fees — they’re the ones who didn’t model them accurately. They budgeted $50K for “city fees” and got hit with $250K. They chose a 50ft lot without checking the density bonus schedule. They went strata when rental would have saved them six figures.
Don’t be that developer.
Sources:
- City-wide DCL rates: vancouver.ca, Bylaw 9755
- Utilities DCL rates: vancouver.ca, Bylaw 12183
- Metro Vancouver DCC: metrovancouver.org
- Density Bonus: Schedule F, Vancouver Zoning and Development By-law
- 20% DCL reduction: City Council resolution, December 10, 2025
Run your full fee stack with our Vancouver Development Cost Calculator → — enter your lot address and get every fee calculated automatically, including density bonus sub-area, DCL totals, and Metro Van DCC by year.


