Minister Christopher O’Sullivan has welcomed Fianna Fáil’s new housing plan which aims to cut through bureaucracy and empower the private sector to deliver more homes.
According to Minister O’Sullivan the plan “takes a zero-tolerance approach to obstacles and introduces major changes to how we deliver infrastructure while addressing barriers that have grown in recent years across the legal system, planning, regulation and procurement.”
The plan launched today by Minister James Browne builds on the progress made under Housing for All and the 137,000 homes delivered since the start of 2021.
Minister O’Sullivan said “We have learned from Housing for all, and we are adapting. Despite record investment, the State can only do so much. To deliver more homes at speed the state will do more to empower others, particularly the private sector, to play their part.
“Every part of society has a role in this plan. Government will lead with record investment and strong direction, but success will depend on local authorities the Land Development Agency Approved Housing Bodies and the private sector working together.
Minister O’Sullivan continued “Fianna Fáil’s plan aims to significantly accelerate private sector delivery by creating the right conditions for investment. It removes unnecessary bureaucracy through regulatory reform. It provides tax incentives to encourage building and is backed by the largest capital investment in the history of the State.”
“Fianna Fáil is putting a strong focus on vacant and derelict homes. Under this new housing plan there will be more staff and funding to tackle vacancy a new Vacant Property Tax and an expanded Vacant Property Refurbishment Grant. Banks will also work with the State so the First Home Scheme can be used to bring more empty and derelict properties back into use.
“This plan should not be seen in isolation. The targeted tax measures introduced in Budget 2026 to encourage private sector delivery are now underway and are backed by the largest capital investment in the history of the State, with €275 billion allocated over the next ten years through the National Development Plan.
Concluding Minister O’Sullivan stated:
“A greater supply of housing will come from directly supporting people to have a home of their own and creating the right conditions for builders to deliver. This plan does both and sets out a clear path to increase supply.”
END
Note to Editor:
Key Measures in the housing plan include:
Supporting People Experiencing Homelessness
Affordable Homes
Infrastructure Delivery
Faster Delivery
Accountability in Housing
Quarterly data publication on housing stats per local authority
Ending Dereliction
Planning
Supporting victims of domestic, sexual & gender-based violence
Victims can transfer their time on social housing waiting lists when moving to another local authority ensuring safety doesn't mean starting over
Review of HAP rent limits
€400m Equity Risk Capital Investment
Boosting Apartment Delivery