Ottawa, Ontario, January 19, 2026 - In 2025, Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Canada and its portfolio partners made generational investments to build the strong communities Canadians need. These investments are building the housing and community infrastructure families rely on.
These investments resulted in almost 59,000 housing units and billions of dollars of contributions and low-interest loans invested in communities from coast to coast to coast.
The federal government made significant investments in core public infrastructure projects that improve Canadians' quality of life and make our communities more resilient, accessible, and inclusive, while creating jobs and supporting economic growth.
Together, we are building an economy by Canadians, for Canadians. These investments are already supporting our communities. Canadians can see most announced projects in their community on the housing and infrastructure project map. Please note that not all federally funded projects can be mapped. More information is available at the project map page.
In Quebec this includes over $1.8 billion across 102 projects.
Quebec 2025 Snapshot
- Approximately $2.81 billion was invested to support the construction and renewal of over 4810 homes.
- Over $1.6 billion to support transit projects that will help Canadians commute or move in their community thanks to more sustainable options, including $650 million to help complete the Montreal Metro Blue line extension project, bringing the total federal contribution to $1.95 billion for that project, and an additional $332.3 million to support the Quebec City tramway project, for a total federal contribution of $1.44 billion for that project.
- Over $134 million to support green projects that will make buildings more energy efficient and climate resilient and will allow the communities to stay active and connected including over $12.9 million to transform the former Papineauville arena into a modern and eco-friendly multifunctional sports centre.
- $140.7 million invested to expand and upgrade housing enabling water, wastewater, storm water and solid waste infrastructure including $128.3 million for the infrastructure needed to support the first phase of the Namur-Hippodrome neighbourhood, to accelerate housing construction in Montreal.
- $52.9 million invested to addressing homelessness in our communities including $50 million in funding over the next two years through the Canada-Quebec Agreement regarding Unsheltered Homelessness and Encampments to support 205 projects across Quebec. This initiative is being implemented in collaboration with the government of Quebec.
- $557.5 million in Canada Community-Building Fund allocations to help communities fund the infrastructure they need.
- 1 055 housing units announced through the development of projects through Build Canada Homes such as Pointe-de-Longueuil.
Canada Infrastructure Bank
- In 2025, the Canada Infrastructure Bank (CIB) has committed $4.875 billion in loans for clean power, green infrastructure, public transit, trade and transportation, broadband and Indigenous infrastructure projects across Canada.
- In the Quebec Region, this includes the $55 million loan for the Torngat Metals project, CIB's first critical minerals loan, which also contributes to Newfoundland and Labrador.
This year demonstrated our commitment to investing in communities, which is why Budget 2025 is guided by the conviction that Canada must remain a nation of builders - of infrastructure and innovation, of trust in public institutions, and of hope for generations to come. As we enter 2026, the Government of Canada will continue to work closely with our provincial, territorial, municipal, and Indigenous partners to build connected, liveable communities with the support of Build Canada Homes and investments through the Building Communities Strong Fund.




















