On April 28, 2026, the City of Toronto announced that its Basement Flooding Protection Subsidy Program would expand on Friday, May 1, 2026 — almost doubling the financial support available to homeowners installing equipment to keep storm and sewer water out of their basements. The per-property maximum rises from $3,400 to $6,650, individual component caps for backwater valves and sump pumps increase by 28% to track market costs, and several new categories of work — a home plumbing assessment, a second backwater valve for homes with multiple sewer connections, and a battery backup for sump pumps — become eligible for the first time.
The expansion is the largest in the program's nearly two decades of operation. Since 2007, Toronto has processed roughly 59,000 applications and disbursed about $86 million in subsidies, with about 14% of eligible property owners participating. Mayor Olivia Chow framed the May 1 changes as "the largest basement flooding subsidy program the City has ever offered." The municipal pitch is aimed squarely at the recent loss record: in 2024, two summer rainfall events that Environment Canada classified as once-in-a-century each dropped more than 100 mm of rain on Toronto in a single day, contributing to basement flooding in more than 1,000 city homes.
For Toronto homeowners with basements — finished or not — this is the rare municipal program where the value of acting now is concrete and quantifiable. The full $6,650 cap is built from a defined set of components that, taken together, describe what a comprehensive basement flood defence looks like in 2026. The catch is timing: the subsidy itself runs for two years after eligible work is completed, but the practical bottleneck is contractor availability through storm season, and funding is annual and awarded first-come, first-served.