With inflation at less than 2% - city Council is suggesting a tax increase of 5.8% for2026

By Gazette Staff

July 2nd, 2025

BURLINGTON, ON

 

Summer is usually an easy time for City Council.

At the meeting scheduled for July 7th,  council will see what the financial people expect the tax increase to be for 2025-26.

 

Add the 2.83 and the 2.98 – you get a total of 5.81 which is what the city wants to set as the tax increase. Enhancing services is where cuts can be made. Has the city explained the new infrastructure well enough?

Hear is how they explain what they feel they will need:-

Based on the investments in current and expanded service delivery included within this report, the City would require a budget increase of 5.80%. Assuming a Region of Halton increase of 4.3% and no change for Education, the overall tax increase is forecasted to be 4.40% equivalent to $42.71 per $100,000 of residential current value assessment (CVA). Burlington’s portion of the overall increase would be 2.98% as outlined below.

Burlington has always shuffled the different financial needs of the Region and the school boards with its own needs.  What the public needs to understand is what the city is spending – this year, that is projected to be close to 6%.

What the other levels of government need is separate – that their spending might reduce the average, is relevant but it is what the city is spending that City Council has to control.  And a close to 6% for 2026 does not look like control

Why the city feels it needs, close to 6%, when inflation is less than 2% is something we find confusing.

Alignment to Corporate Strategy

Burlington’s Strategic Planning Approach, is undergoing an internal strategic realignment. This includes a revised 25-year Strategic Plan as well as a shift from the service-based Vision to Focus to a department-based 5-year Corporate Strategy.

This Corporate Strategy includes:

Strategic Directions for the organization.

These are the high-level, overarching priorities to achieve the vision and mission:

Deliver Positive Community Impact

Build Transparency and Public Trust

Unlock Innovation and Partnerships

Enable Sustainable Growth

Transparency and Public Trust will be a challenge for this council

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4 comments to With inflation at less than 2% – city Council is suggesting a tax increase of 5.8% for2026

  • Caren

    I agree with all of the comments before me!
    We do not need anymore shiny new objects or new projects in Burlington. What we need right here and now is a Mayor and Council who can be frugal, and cut all of the excessive spending to a total of no more than 2% tax increase, which is less then the present rate of inflation.
    We do not need anymore services, anymore Bateman’s or massive arenas, expensive festivals, Food for Feedback, Neighborhood parties, trips to Japan and Holland by our Mayor and CAO plus a selection of Councilors and committee members to be traveling abroad on the Burlington Taxpayers dime!!
    We need a Mayor and Council who will listen to their residents and immediately cut back on all of the frills and overspending at City Hall, including excessive staff and inflated salaries.
    Burlington Property Tax Payers can no longer afford all of the Fluff, overspending and the nice to have projects, which are costing all of us as a result of the goings on at Burlington City Hall!!! This needs to Stop now!!

  • George King

    Why is Burlington’s proposed property tax increase 5.8% while Oakville’s is only 3.5%?
    As a resident, I have serious questions:
    1. Who proposed and approved this number?
    2. What exactly justifies such a steep increase—again—compared to neighbouring cities?
    3. Is Burlington facing unique financial challenges that Oakville isn’t? Or is it a matter of poor budgeting and overspending?
    4. How is this sustainable for working families, seniors, and residents already stretched thin by high inflation and rising mortgage rates?

    We deserve full transparency:
    • Where is this extra money going?
    • Are we funding critical infrastructure, or growing a bloated city administration?
    • Are we seeing real value, or are we just paying for more overseas “delegations” and nice titles at city hall?

    It’s getting harder to accept year-after-year increases that far exceed inflation without clear accountability. Other cities manage to balance their budgets more responsibly—why can’t Burlington?

  • James

    We have nothing more to give. Our pockets have been picked clean between perpetual tax increases, general cost of living increases, and stagnating incomes that don’t even come close to keeping up with inflation anymore. Our households are having to make difficult choices daily between needs versus wants, with even some needs having to be deferred. This isn’t a game, City Hall needs to understand that there is a breaking point, and we’re getting very close to it. Anything more than a 2% increase is indicative of gross mismanagement. 0% should be the target.

  • Graham

    This non stop spending binge has to stop.We need to see an all out effort to find ways to cut spending.A review of all programs,staff decreases and a pay freeze would be a good start.

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