The Winners and Losers From the Victorian Budget
The budget also adds nearly $4 billion for health and $137.7 million for police as debt climbs to $175.6 billion.
- On Tuesday, May 5, 2026, Victorian Treasurer Jaclyn Symes delivered the election-year budget, projecting the state's first operating surplus in seven years at $727 million.
- Despite the surplus, net debt is forecast to hit $175.6 billion in 2026/27, rising to $199.3 billion by 2029/30, creating a significant fiscal challenge for the government.
- Drivers can claim a 20 per cent rebate on vehicle registration costing $758.5 million, while public transport fares will be halved from June 1 through the remainder of the year.
- Health services will receive $4 billion, including $1.6 billion for hospital staff and resources, while police receive $222 million and $200 million funds jail system capacity increases.
- Education receives $1.6 billion for infrastructure and $2.2 billion for disability support in schools, while stamp duty concessions for off-the-plan purchases extend to contracts signed before April 21, 2027.
12 Articles
12 Articles
The winners and losers from the Victorian budget
Who were the major winners and losers from the 2026 Victorian state budget as Treasurer Jaclyn Symes announces fiscal support for 2026/27 financial year. Education, transport, infrastructure and health are all in the spotlight.
Vic budget boosts aged care - Aged Care Insite
Aged care services are among the winners in the Victorian Budget 2026/27, with new funding aimed at improving safety, reducing hospital transfers and strengthening in‑home and residential care support. Treasurer Jaclyn Symes said the budget “acknowledges the real challenges Victorians are facing” as families continue to grapple with ever-rising costs fueled by global conflict and national inflationary pressures. “Victorians that are doing it tou…
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- 57% of the sources lean Left
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