Enacted Budget – Fiscal Year 2026
On June 30, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy signed the state’s fiscal 2026 budget, with line item vetoes. The enacted budget provides for $58.78 billion in total state fund appropriations and $31.01 billion in federal fund appropriations. The budget is based on total resources for all state funds of $65.8 billion, including a beginning balance of $8.3 billion, general fund revenue of $33.7 billion, property tax relief fund revenue of $22.7 billion, Casino Revenue Fund resources of $1.03 billion (including a beginning balance of $147 million), Casino Control Fund revenue of $80 million, and Gubernatorial Elections Fund revenue of $0.7 million. The budget projects an undesignated ending balance (or surplus) of $6.7 billion.
The budget prioritizes fiscal responsibility, affordability and economic security, support for the next generation, and the state’s economic future. The budget includes several tax policy changes including increases for the highest tier of realty transfer fees, sports betting, and cigarettes and vaping, while also creating a new exemption for small business investment and changes to the Angel Investor Tax Credit. The budget invests Corporate Transit Fee revenue into supporting and modernizing public transit, as well as makes investments in road and bridge projects and NJ TRANSIT capital projects. To support affordability, the budget continues to provide direct property tax relief through programs like ANCHOR and Senior Freeze, while also implementing the Stay NJ program to help senior citizens remain in New Jersey. The budget also supports first-time and first-generation homeowners with down payment assistance, provides funds to ensure state employee access to paid parental leave, expands Family Connects NJ to provide free home visits to new parents, and provides funding for women’s health care programs on top of what is covered by state-sponsored insurance programs. For education, the budget fully funds the state’s school funding formula as well as eases volatility in school funding by limiting year-over-year changes in state funding for any school district, expands preschool programs into new districts to move towards free, universal preschool, funds incentive grants to school districts interested in transitioning to phone-free environments, and provides new grant funds to help fund high-impact tutoring. The budget also provides significant operating and capital support for higher education institutions, as well as sets aside funds from the Debt Defeasance and Prevention Fund to put towards constructing a new correctional facility. For the fifth consecutive year, the budget provides a full payment to the pension systems.