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How Mayor Parker Wants to Spend Your Money in 2026

Mayor Parker giving her FY2026 budget address before Philadelphia City Council on March 13, 2025. Photo by Chris Mansfield and Ta'Liyah Thomas.

Mayor Parker giving her FY2026 budget address before Philadelphia City Council on March 13, 2025. Photo by Chris Mansfield and Ta'Liyah Thomas.

Now more than a full year in office, Mayor Cherelle Parker proposed her second budget, for fiscal year 2026, on March 13, 2025. The spending priorities outlined in the $6.8 billion budget for the City’s General Fund, about $375 million more than last year’s budget, will help shape daily life for Philadelphians over the next year — and longer.

The General Fund, the City’s main operating source of revenue, is primarily funded through taxes, and it determines what services Philadelphians receive in return for those taxes. Do you feel safe in your neighborhood? Can you find affordable housing? Is your trash picked up on time? When is your local library open? Is the park down the street clean? The programs that do — or do not — get funded in the City’s budget determine the answers to these questions.

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“The City budget is one of the most powerful tools we have to understand our local government’s priorities and to have a say in shaping them,” says Lauren Cristella, President and CEO of the Committee of Seventy. “When residents understand how their tax dollars are spent, they’re better equipped to advocate for their communities and hold leaders accountable. Making the budget process accessible is essential to building trust, transparency, and a more engaged Philadelphia.”

The General Fund is the main way that the City pays for day-to-day operations, and it supports core resident-facing municipal functions like police, firefighters, trash collection, parks, and libraries. It also includes spending on new programs that are Mayoral priorities, like Mayor Parker’s Clean and Green Initiatives and H.O.M.E Initiative. These new spending areas must be balanced against fixed costs, like employee benefits and debt payments, that can’t be easily changed from year to year and often take up a sizable portion of the budget.

City Council is in the process of holding budget hearings with each department head about the budget requests — and hearing from citizens about what they want to see funded (or not). Council must approve a budget in time for the start of fiscal year (FY) 2026 on July 1, 2026.

To better understand the City’s latest budget, we divided funding totals by Philadelphia’s whole population and looked at how the per-person totals for the FY 2026 budget compared to those from last fiscal year (FY 2025). See below the chart for some of the main highlights.

 

Here are some of the most substantial takeaways:


Sources: City of Philadelphia Proposed FY 2026 Budget in Brief and Adopted FY 2025 Budget in Brief.

Figures represent proposed funding in fiscal year 2026 for the City of Philadelphia’s General Fund budget, adjusted for population using the latest available data. Per-person spending totals are compared to the adopted General Fund budget for fiscal year 2025. Funding for the Early Childhood Education program was separated from the budget for the Department of Human Services and categorized separately.


Nick Hand was director of the City Controller’s Finance, Policy and Data unit during Rebecca Rhynhart’s tenure.

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