The Ontario Neurodegenerative Disease Research Initiative (ONDRI) is a multimodal, multi-year, prospective observational cohort study to characterise five diseases: (1) Alzheimer's disease (AD) or amnestic single or multidomain mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) (AD/MCI); (2) amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS); (3) frontotemporal dementia (FTD); (4) Parkinson's disease (PD); and (5) vascular cognitive impairment (VCI). The ONDRI Genomics subgroup is investigating the genetic basis of neurodegeneration. We have developed a custom next-generation-sequencing-based panel, ONDRISeq that targets 80 genes known to be associated with neurodegeneration. We processed DNA collected from 216 individuals diagnosed with one of the five diseases, on ONDRISeq. All runs were executed on a MiSeq instrument and subjected to rigorous quality control assessments. We also independently validated a subset of the variant calls using NeuroX (a genome-wide array for neurodegenerative disorders), TaqMan allelic discrimination assay, or Sanger sequencing. ONDRISeq consistently generated high-quality genotyping calls and on average, 92% of targeted bases are covered by at least 30 reads. We also observed 100% concordance for the variants identified via ONDRISeq and validated by other genomic technologies. We were successful in detecting known as well as novel rare variants in 72.2% of cases although not all variants are disease-causing. Using ONDRISeq, we also found that the APOE E4 allele had a frequency of 0.167 in these samples. Our optimised workflow highlights next-generation sequencing as a robust tool in elucidating the genetic basis of neurodegenerative diseases by screening multiple candidate genes simultaneously.