Enacted Budget – Fiscal Year 2026
On June 30, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed the fiscal 2026 budget after vetoing $567 million in spending. The budget, as provided by the General Appropriation Act, totals $115.1 billion in all funds, a decrease of $3.5 billion, or 2.9 percent, compared to the fiscal 2025 budget (as cited in the governor’s recommended budget agency report). The general revenue portion of the fiscal 2026 budget is $50.6 billion, an increase of $797.2 million, or 1.6 percent, over the fiscal 2025 budget. The March 2025 revenue estimating conference estimated net general revenues of $50.2 billion for fiscal 2026, an increase of 1.9 percent over the updated fiscal 2025 estimate. The state has total reserves of $15.7 billion, including $4.9 billion in the state’s rainy day funds.
The budget continues the governor’s commitment to fiscal responsibility and funds several priorities including teacher pay, law enforcement compensation, education, Everglades restoration, water quality initiatives, and transportation. In education the budget provides the highest per student investment ever for K-12 public schools while covering the costs of more than 429,000 students projected to participate in the state’s school choice program. The budget also provides salary increases for teachers and other instructional personnel while investing in early childhood education, school safety, and civics engagement programs. For economic development, the budget invests in the state’s transportation network, Job Growth Grant Fund to support local infrastructure and workforce training projects, and the Rural Infrastructure Fund, along with funds for workforce housing. The budget increases pay for state sworn law enforcement officers, including an increase in the minimum annual base pay rate to $60,000. Investments in the Everglades restoration are included in the budget, along with funds to support targeted water quality improvements. Other priorities in the budget include funds to support the citrus industry; disaster response, recovery and mitigation; mental health resiliency; children and families; and veterans. The enacted budget also provides $2 billion in tax relief including permanently repealing the business rent tax, renewing and expanding several sales tax holidays, and various exemptions for data centers.