a charge levied on new homes to pay for the construction of off-site capital improvements that benefit that development
a charge or assessment imposed by the city against new developments in order to generate revenue for recouping or funding the costs of capital improvements caused by the new development
a fee imposed by a municipality on a new development project designed to generate money to pay for matters attributable to the new development
a one-time assessment placed on all new development or construction
a one-time charge imposed on new construction
a small fee charged by the county for park maintenance
A fee assessed against private developers in compensation for the new capacity requirements their projects impose upon public facilities.
A municipal assessment against new residential, industrial or commercial development projects to compensate for the added costs of public services generated by the new construction.
A fee, also called a development fee, levied on the developer of a project by a City, County, or other public agency as compensation for otherwise-unmitigated impacts the project will produce. California Government Code ยง 66000 et seq specifies that development fees shall not exceed the estimated reasonable cost of providing the service for which the fee is charged. To lawfully impose a development fee, the public agency must verify its method of calculation and document proper restrictions on use of the fund.
An impact fee is a one-time charge imposed on new development, to help pay for off-site impacts and costs of development.
Money collected from developers to finance public improvements needed due to new developments.
A fee assessed by a municipality on a project in an effort to pay for the project's impact on the community in terms of increased density, use of water and sewer systems, use of schools, increased traffic, etc.
An impact fee is a fee most commonly assessed on the construction of new buildings within a jurisdiction. The purpose is to pay for expansion of new government buildings such as fire stations, police stations, sewer and water supply systems, parks, libraries, and other government agencies and services.