Housing and Homelessness

image of a person holding a model of a houseDurham Affordable Housing Rent Program

Currently accepting registrations for the Durham Affordable Housing Rent Program.

Register for the Durham Affordable Housing Rent Program

Hands holding coloured puzzle piecesHousing Stability ProgramLooking for help with last month's rent, rental or utility arrears? Please see the Housing Stability Program for more information on how we can help.Group of people looking at papers on a tableIncome Tax Clinics

Find Free Income Tax Clinics.

Visit the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) website to Register for My Account.

The CRA My Account gives you quick access to your tax information when you need it.

If you are an RGI tenant or co-op member in community housing, you must file your income tax return every year.

Apply for housing

You can apply for rental housing in Durham Region through private landlords, community housing and affordable housing providers. You can also apply for housing assistance to make your rent more affordable.

Community and affordable housing providers may offer seniors' housing or accessible (modified) units. Some community agencies also offer supportive or alternative housing.

There can be long waits for community housing and for housing assistance. You will likely need to find your own rental housing in the private market while you are on the affordable housing waiting list.

The Region of Durham’s Affordable Housing Rent (DAHR) Program is a new program that partners with landlords to provide affordable housing units in the community. These partnerships provide increased availability of affordable housing in Durham. The Region of Durham will bridge the affordability gap between market rent set by the landlord and a more affordable rent for tenants.

This is not a rent-geared-to-income program.

Location of units being offered:

80 Bond Street East, Oshawa – Hydro & Water Excluded, Parking & Storage Excluded, Mandatory Internet Charge

100 Bond Street East, Oshawa – Hydro & Water Included, Parking & Storage Excluded

Key Features:

Available Units:

  • 10 one-bedroom units
  • 10 two-bedroom units

Eligibility:

  • Must meet Durham Affordable Housing Rent Program income eligibility requirements below
  • Must be a resident of Durham Region

Affordability Support:

  • This is not a Rent Geared to Income program
  • The Region of Durham only provides the difference between market rent and the affordable rent paid by tenants

Limited Availability:

  • Units are offered on a first-come, first-served basis
  • Priority is based on the order of registration submission
  • Only eligible registrants will be notified
Bedroom sizeAffordable monthly rentMinimum net household income per yearMaximum net household income limit per year

One-bedroom

$1309

$45,000

$64,000

Two-bedroom

$1357

$45,000

$67,000

Register Here

Contact 311 for questions

The Region of Durham funds and monitors most community housing providers in the region. We also operate Housing Durham. It is the largest community housing provider in the region.

All community housing providers offer RGI. Some private landlords also provide RGI under agreement with the Region of Durham. Keep in mind that there is a long wait list for RGI units.

Apply for an RGI unit

Affordable housing is housing that was developed with government funding. Rents in affordable housing are about 80 per cent of the average market rent for similar units in the area. Affordable housing providers keep their own wait lists.

Apply for an affordable housing unit

Seniors' housing

Some community and affordable housing providers have properties where only seniors live. Others have specific units for seniors but also house non-seniors. Seniors’ housing may be rent-geared-to-income (RGI) or market rent, and some units may be modified for accessibility.

Apply for seniors' housing

Some community and affordable housing providers have units that are modified to make them accessible for people using a wheelchair or with other special needs.

Apply for accessible (modified) housing

If you need help to live independently in the community, you can apply for supportive or alternative housing.

Supportive housing

If you need help to live independently in the community, you can apply for supportive or alternative housing.

These community housing providers have agreements with support agencies to house people that use their services:

  • Consideration Co-op
  • Cormack Station
  • New Hope Dwellings
  • Northview Meadows Co-op
  • Durham Region Non-Profit Housing Corporation.

You may be eligible for rent-geared-to-income (RGI) or you may have to pay market rent depending on the agreement that the housing provider has with your agency.

If you are working with a support agency, ask them if they have agreements with these housing providers or if they can help you find supportive housing with a different landlord.

Alternative housing

Some community housing providers offer alternative housing for people who have experienced homelessness or who have had difficulty finding and maintaining tenancies. They offer support services to help people move back into the community after long periods of homelessness or unstable housing.

People who live in alternative housing pay rent-geared-to-income (RGI). Contact the alternative housing provider directly to apply.

Cornerstone Community Association Durham Inc.

454 Bloor St. E., Oshawa

905-433-3807

Houses single transient men and women.

Cornerstone also has some units at Cormack Station and Northview Meadow Co-op.

John Howard Society

298-300 Anderson St., Oshawa

905-579-8482

Houses youth aged 16 to 22 years.

YWCA of Oshawa

55 McGrigor St., Oshawa

905-728-5227

Houses women with a history of emotional or psychiatric problems, woman-led sole-support parent households, physically disabled women, and abused women.

YWCA also has some units at Cormack Station.

A portable housing benefit (PHB) is a monthly benefit paid directly to eligible low-income households to bridge the gap between affordable rent (roughly 30 percent of income) and some or all of average market rent.

Durham Portable Housing Benefit (Durham PHB)

The Durham PHB is portable within Durham Region only.

To be eligible to receive a Durham PHB, you must:

  • be on the Durham Access to Social Housing (DASH) wait list or eligible to be on the wait list

  • reside in Durham Region

  • not be receiving rent-geared-to-income (RGI), the Durham Housing Benefit, another portable housing benefit, a housing allowance, rent supplement or other housing benefit.

Durham PHB Guidelines

Frequently asked questions

The average market rent in Durham used to calculate the Durham PHB is:

  • $1,576 – 1 bedroom

  • $1,672 – 2 bedrooms

  • $1,851 – 3 bedrooms

  • $2,040 – 4 or more bedrooms

Canada-Ontario Housing Benefit

The Canada-Ontario Housing Benefit is a federal-provincial portable housing benefit that is paid directly to eligible applicants to help them pay their rent. It can be used to live anywhere in Ontario. To be eligible to receive the Canada-Ontario Housing Benefit, you must:

  • be on the Durham Access to Social Housing (DASH) wait list or eligible to be on the wait list
  • not be receiving rent-geared-to-income (RGI), the Durham Housing Benefit, another portable housing benefit, a housing allowance, rent supplement or other housing benefit
  • not be a homeowner.

Priority for the Canada-Ontario Housing Benefit will be given to applicants who are homeless or at risk of homelessness, people with disabilities, survivors of domestic violence or human trafficking, Indigenous people and seniors.

Frequently asked questions about the Canada-Ontario Housing Benefit

Some community housing providers in Durham Region are not funded by the Region of Durham. They keep their own wait lists and may offer market rent units, subsidized units or units that have been modified for accessibility.

Apply for other community housing

Housing outreach workers can also help you find affordable market rent housing.

Find a housing outreach worker in your area

Some community housing providers have both rent-geared-to-income (RGI) and market rent units. Their market rents are sometimes lower than rents with private landlords. You do not have to be eligible for RGI to apply for a market rent unit.

Contact the housing provider directly to apply for a market rent unit.

Contact community housing providers about market rent vacancies

These providers are funded by the Region of Durham.

Contact other community housing providers about market rent vacancies

These providers are not funded by the Region of Durham.

Help if you are homeless

Find information for emergency shelters

This program is offered through the Métis Nation of Ontario. This is a great resource for Métis Nation of Ontario citizens who are homeless, at immediate risk of becoming homeless, or in an unstable housing situation.

Métis Housing Stabilization Program

Housing Durham

We operate the largest community housing provider in Durham. Find out more about Housing Durham, including information for tenants.