Gov. Sherrill Proposes $60.7 Billion Budget
–
March 11, 2026
Proposal Includes $1.7 Billion Structural Deficit
On March 10, Governor Mikie Sherrill delivered her budget proposal for New Jersey’s 2027 fiscal year, which begins July 1. The proposed $60.7 billion budget, which is 1.6% higher ($980 million) than the state’s current budget, includes the following:
- $2 billion in cuts
- More than $7 billion for a full pension payment
- A $5.4 billion surplus (down from $7.2 billion in the current year’s budget)
- More than $4 billion in direct property tax relief:
- The income threshold for Stay NJ would be reduced from $500,000 to $250,000, and the maximum benefit would be capped at $4,000.
- No change in ANCHOR benefit amounts
- A $1 million cap on the corporate tax deduction for net operating losses (NOLs) and prior net operating losses (PNOLs)
- Amendments to the alternative business calculation:
- Reduction in deduction for businesses with gross income between $500,000 and $1 million to 25%
- Deduction eliminated for businesses with gross income above $1 million
- A new per-employee fee on employers with more than 50 employees enrolled in NJ FamilyCare (New Jersey’s Medicaid)
- $12.4 billion for K-12 schools and $1.4 billion for pre-K and
- More than $1 billion for NJ Transit, including $766 million from the corporate transit fee
There is a $1.7 billion structural budget deficit.
The Governor also indicated that there would be reductions in filing fees for corporations and nonprofits; funding for additional employees for the New Jersey Business Action Center; continued funding for the Main Street Recovery Fund; support for additional staffing at NJDEP to expedite permitting; and creation of a permitting dashboard.
The budget has to be approved by the Assembly and the Senate and signed into law by June 30.