Puerto Rico

Puerto Rico

Budget Cycle
Annual
  

Date Budget Introduced
Varies
Fiscal Year Begins
July 1
 
Governor Signs Budget 
July 1
 

Budget Links

FY2026 (enacted)
FY2026 (proposed)
FY2025 (enacted)
FY2024 (enacted)
FY2023 (enacted)

Enacted Budget – Fiscal Year 2026
On June 27, the Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico certified the fiscal 2026 budget that was developed jointly by the Oversight Board, the governor, and the legislative assembly. The total budget for fiscal 2026 is $32.7 billion. General fund spending in the fiscal 2026 budget totals $13.1 billion. The general fund budget increases total spending by 1.5 percent from fiscal 2025 levels. The budget holds back five percent of most agency spending for eight months to prevent deficits should general fund revenue decline, federal funding decreases, or Medicaid costs increase. The budget also includes a reserve to cover the rising healthcare costs related to Medicaid.

The board commented that the budget is responsible, protects essential government services, and shields government priorities. The budget makes investments in healthcare, education, public safety, social programs, and government transformation. It includes funding to increase subsidies for medical residents, provide pay raises for nurses, increase care for older residents and adults with disabilities, provide funds for childcare vouchers, and increase services for victims of sexual abuse. 

Proposed Budget - Fiscal Year 2026
On May 15, Puerto Rico Governor Jennifer González Colón and the Financial Oversight and Management Board for Puerto Rico submitted a proposed budget for fiscal year 2026 to the Legislative Assembly. The total consolidated budget for fiscal 2026 totals $32.6 billion, an increase of 1.5 percent from fiscal 2025. General funds total $13.1 billion for fiscal 2026.
 


Proposed Budget Highlights 

    The governor noted that the fiscal 2026 budget keeps public spending intact while focusing on addressing critical areas including doing justice to retirees, the safety of residents, and guaranteeing access to health care for people. The proposed budget includes safeguards to protect essential services including budgetary reserves, increased holdbacks, and mechanisms that allow the repurposing of funds to respond to federal government policy changes. The proposed budget allocates the general fund in the following ways: 

    • 64 percent, or $8.4 billion of the general fund, is dedicated to education, public safety, healthcare, and pension payments. 
    • 8 percent is dedicated to debt service. 
    • 4 percent each is allocated for infrastructure and for judicial and legislature. 
    • 3 percent is allocated to families and children. 
    • 2 percent each is directed to economic development and municipalities. 
    • 12 percent is dedicated to other areas. 


    Proposed Budget Links

    News Release

    FOMB Press Release