11 things that will cost you more in Ottawa in 2025
Ottawa residents will be paying more to board the bus and the O-Train, park on city streets, use City of Ottawa services and turn on the lights in 2025.
CTVNewsOttawa.ca looks at 11 things that will cost you more in Ottawa this year.
- Sign up now for daily CTV News Ottawa newsletters
- The information you need to know, sent directly to you: Download the CTV News App
OC Transpo fares
Transit riders will be paying more to board the bus in 2025.
The 2025 City of Ottawa budget includes a five per cent increase in transit fares, and the elimination of free rides for 11- and 12-year-olds.
Here is a look at the OC Transpo fare increases:
As of Jan. 1, 2025:
- Adult monthly pass: $135 ($128.75 in 2024)
- Youth monthly pass (13 to 18 years-old): $104 ($99.25 in 2024)
- Adult single-ride fare (paid by card): $4 ($3.80 in 2024)
- Adult single-ride fare (paid by cash): $4.05 ($3.85 in 2024)
- Senior single-ride fare (paid by e-purse): $3.20 ($2.90 in 2024)
- 11–12-year-old single-ride fare (paid by e-purse): $2 (free in 2024). The fare is $4 if paying with cash.
- 1-day pass: $12 ($11.75 in 2024)
- 3-day pass: $30 ($28.50 in 2024)
- 5-day pass: $47.75 ($45.75 in 2024)
- 7-day pass: $56.75 ($54.25 in 2024)
- 2-for-1 day pass (weekends/holidays): $12 ($11.75 in 2024)
As of Feb. 1, 2025:
- Senior monthly pass: $58.25 ($49 in 2024)
An Ottawa LRT train on the Confederation Line is seen in this undated photo. (Natalie van Rooy/CTV News Ottawa)
City of Ottawa services
Ottawa residents will be paying more for property taxes, water rates and garbage collection fees in 2025.
Council approved the 2025 budget with 3.9 per cent property tax hike, adding $168 to the average property tax bill in Ottawa. The $168 includes the increase in the transit levy.
The cost of turning on your taps and flushing the toilet will increase $43.07 this year, as the 2025 budget increases water, wastewater and stormwater rates an average of 4.4 per cent.
The solid waste user fee increases from $145 to $243 in 2025 for a single-family household. The fee covers garbage and recycling collection.
Tipping fees to use the landfill increase 10.6 per cent.
Ottawa City Hall is seen in this undated file photo. (CTV News Ottawa)
On-street parking rates
The cost to park on city streets and at municipal on-street spaces increases 2.6 to 2.9 per cent in 2025, effective Jan. 1.
Here is a look at the new rates:
- Residential parking permit: $770 a year ($750 in 2024)
- Residential parking permit – summer: $36 a month ($35 in 2024)
- Residential parking permit – winter: $167 ($163 in 2024)
- Residential visitor parking per week or less – winter: $41.75 ($40.75 in 2024)
The maximum on-street parking rate will increase from $4.50 to $5. Staff will have the delegated authority to increase parking rates during the year.
The maximum on-street rate for a motorcycle will increase $0.25 to $2.50.
There will be no change in parking rates at City of Ottawa parking lots in 2025.
Parking rates are increasing at Mooney's Bay and Petrie Island. The City of Ottawa says 30-minute parking rates at Mooney's Bay increase $0.25 to $1.50, while 30-minute parking at Petrie Island increases $0.25 to $1.25.
Recreation fees
Rental and membership fees for arenas and recreational activities in Ottawa increase in 2025.
Here is a look at the increases:
- Arena rental - Adult: $341.67 ($331.88 in 2024)
- Arena rental – Commercial: $351.68 ($340.60 in 2024)
- Arena rental – Minor: $204.81 ($198.94 in 2024)
- Arena rental – non-prime time: $159.33 ($154.76 in 2024)
- Artificial turf – Adult: $142.94 ($138.84 in 2024)
- Artificial turf – Minor: $84.15 ($81.74 in 2024)
- Sports fields/ball diamonds: Increasing 3 per cent. Prices range between $20.45 and $50.11.
General admission:
- Museum admission: up 2.9 to 3 per cent to between $3.95 and $20.49
- Public skating: 0 per cent to 7.6 per cent increase to $1.99 to $7.96
- Public swim: up 2.8 per cent to 3 per cent to $2.55 to $6.20
Memberships:
- Aquafitness: $54.13-$904.43 ($52.58-$878.41 in 2024)
- Fitness: $24.85 to $1,011 ($24.14-$982.35 in 2024)
- Museum: $39.15 ($38.38 in 2024)
- Personal training: up 3 per cent to $23.23-$67.15
- Swim: Up 3 per cent to $24.16-$651.29
Hourly programming:
- Aquatics – Learn to Swim: up 2.9 per cent to $5.28-$32.91
- Day camps: up 2.7 per cent to 3 per cent to $1.84 to $17.82
- Fitness: up 2.9 per cent to $0.16 to $16.76
- Learn to Skate: up 3 per cent to $13.80 to $30.62
Hydro rates
It will cost you more to turn on the lights in 2025.
Hydro Ottawa says the Ontario Energy Board approved changes to its distribution rates, with a typical residential customer using 750 kilowatt-hours per month seeing an increase of approximately $0.16 per month.
"This includes a $0.32 increase in the fixed monthly distribution charge," Hydro Ottawa told CTV News Ottawa.
The monthly distribution rate covers Hydro Ottawa's cost to deliver electricity from generating stations across Ontario to homes in Ottawa.
In 2024, Hydro Ottawa's distribution rate increased $4.92 a month for a residential customer consuming 750 kWh an hour.
Rental rates
Renters in Ottawa and across Ontario face a maximum rent increase of 2.5 per cent this year.
The Ontario government approved a maximum 2.5 per cent increase in rent for 2025, based on the Ontario Consumer Price Index. Landlords need approval from the Landlord and Tenant Board to increase rental rates above 2.5 per cent.
The guideline does not apply to new buildings and most new basement apartments that are occupied for the first time for residential purposes after Nov. 15, 2018.
A for rent and a for sale sign are displayed on a house in a new housing development in Ottawa on Friday, Oct. 14, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
Home prices
Real estate prices are expected to rise in 2025, as interest rates fall.
The RE/MAX Canada 2025 Housing Market Outlook Report predicts housing prices in Ottawa will increase 2.5 per cent to an average of $695,033 this year. Housing prices are expected to rise 5 per cent in Kingston.
The Royal LePage Market Survey Forecast predicts Ottawa home prices will increase 4 per cent by the end of 2025, with condominium prices jumping three per cent.
A new home is displayed for sale in a housing development in Ottawa on Tuesday, July 14, 2020. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick)
Food prices
Food prices are expected to rise three to five per cent in 2025.
The Canada Food Price Report says the average family of four will spend $16,833 on food in 2025, up $801 from 2024.
The report from Dalhousie University, the University of Guelph, the University of Saskatchewan and the University of British Columbia says food prices are influenced by a variety of global factors, including energy costs, inflation, currencies and trade, food distribution, climate change and geopolitical conflicts.
Meat is expected to increase four to six per cent, while restaurant prices will jump three to five per cent.
Vegetables are laid out on a table at a grocery story. (Paul Hollingsworth/CTV Atlantic)
Ottawa Police Service reports
The cost for police record checks from the Ottawa Police Service increase this year.
- Police Record Checks – Vulnerable Sector Employment: $72 (up from $71 in 2024)
- Police Record Checks – Adoption: $118 (up from $115 in 2024)
- Police Record Checks – Pardon Applications: $72 (up from $71 in 2024)
- Criminal Records Check: $72 (up from $71 in 2024)
- Crime Free Multi-Housing Record Checks: $43 (up from $41 in 2024)
- Occurrence Report: $64 (up from $62 in 2024)
- False Alarm Fee: $176 (up from $172 in 2024)
- Impound Recovery Fee: $200 (up from $195 in 2024)
Ottawa Police headquarters on Elgin St. is seen in this undated photo. (CTV News Ottawa)
First Aid Courses
The cost for first aid training with the City of Ottawa increases in 2025.
- Standard First Aid Certification (two-day course): $150.50 ($146.85 in 2024)
- Standard First Aid Recertification (one-day course): $99.30 ($96.90 in 2024)
- Emergency First Aid Recertification (one-day course): $99.30 ($96.60 in 2024)
- First Aid Instructor Certification (two-day course): $256.35 ($250.10 in 2024)
Walking down the aisle
It will cost you more to say “I do” in Ottawa in 2025.
The cost of a marriage licence increases two per cent to $186.55.
Civil marriages will cost more at Ottawa City Hall. Option 1: Monday to Friday during business hours will now cost $163.18, up from $159.20 in 2024.
Option 2: Friday evening and Saturday afternoons will cost $163.18, up from $159.20 in 2024.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Calgary woman stranded in Mexico after husband's death during diving trip
A Calgary woman is struggling to return home after her husband died while diving in Mexico, leaving her stranded and facing financial hardship.
Fugitive U.S. rioter seeks asylum in Whistler amid warnings of more to come
An American citizen convicted of participating in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot on Capitol Hill and dodging jail time in Whistler may just be the start of an asylum-seeking rush, according to a prominent legal expert.
Special national Liberal caucus meeting called for next week after regional chairs meet: sources
A special meeting of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's national Liberal caucus has been called for next Wednesday, sources say.
N.S. community shocked by deaths of father, daughter; suspect was wanted in Toronto shooting
A Nova Scotia community is mourning the loss of two of its members after they were shot and killed in Halifax on New Year's Eve.
Canada pausing applications for parent, grandparent permanent residency sponsorships
Canada will not accept new parent and grandparent permanent residency sponsorship applications until further notice, according to a ministerial directive.
Soldier who blew up Tesla at Trump hotel left note saying blast was to be a 'wakeup call' for the U.S.
A highly decorated Army soldier who fatally shot himself in a Tesla Cybertruck just before it blew up outside the Trump hotel in Las Vegas left notes saying the New Year's Day explosion was a stunt to serve as a “wakeup call” for the country’s ills, investigators said Friday.
Sea and Himalayan salts recalled in Canada: 'Do not use, serve or distribute'
Two brands of sea and Himalayan salt are being recalled in Canada due to pieces of plastic found in the products.
'Inadmissible' foreign nationals to pay more upon return to Canada: CBSA
Foreign nationals who refuse or are unable to pay their own way home after being denied stay in Canada will soon face steeper financial penalties should they ever attempt to return.
'It's about time': Experts in Canada support call for warnings about cancer risk from alcohol
While Canada hasn't mandated cancer warnings for alcoholic beverages, a few experts are supporting a new push in the U.S. to have the labels on the products.