Understanding Impact Fees
Public service demands are constantly growing because of increasing population, inflation, rising real incomes, and myriad other reasons. And the local revenue base — including taxes, grants, and user fees and charges — does not always grow fast enough to meet the increased public service demands.
Many communities have turned to impact fees to construct public infrastructure systems on the assumption that new development must pay its way.
Impact fees are imposed by a local government on a new or proposed development project to pay for all or a portion of the costs of providing public services to the new development. This fee is levied on an upfront or front-end basis — usually at the time of building permit issuance or subdivision approval, or certificate of occupancy — and is prescribed by ordinance (although the dollar amount may or may not be specified).
However, the use of impact fees shifts much of the financial burden away from all public infrastructure users (i.e., the general public) to a narrow segment of the public: home builders and new home buyers.
NAHB has created a toolkit to explore impact fees and their potential effects on the local community, and to provide strategies for achieving balanced infrastructure financing solutions, including talking points for discussing impact fees within your local officials.
Learn more about this topic and other land development-related issues in NAHB’s Land Use 101.
Latest from NAHBNow
Apr 18, 2025
Empowering New Home Buyers and Builders with Data and ExposureHomebuyers are increasingly relying on a research-driven approach to their new home buying experience. Homes.com is meeting that need with its new home marketplace.
Apr 17, 2025
Trade War Will Create Further Economic and Financial Market StressNAHB Chief Economist Robert Dietz provided this economic and housing industry overview in the bi-weekly newsletter Eye On the Economy.
Latest Economic News
Apr 17, 2025
Constrained housing affordability conditions due to elevated interest rates, rising construction costs and labor shortages led to a reduction in housing production in March.
Apr 16, 2025
Growing economic uncertainty stemming from tariff concerns and elevated building material costs kept builder sentiment in negative territory in April, despite a modest bump in confidence likely due to a slight retreat in mortgage interest rates in recent weeks.
Apr 14, 2025
The most common sources for products used in home building and remodeling are specialty retailers, lumber yards, and wholesale distributors, according to two recent NAHB surveys. The surveys include one of single-family homebuilders in the October 2024 NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI) and one of remodelers in the Q3 2024 NAHB/Westlake Royal Remodeling Market Index (RMI). Both surveys asked respondents where they purchase building products, regardless of who ultimately purchases them (themselves or subcontractors).