Foreword

Building a better New South Wales

Each Budget is a moment in time. But the real work of governing happens in sequence.

This Budget continues the journey embarked upon in our first: restoring essential services, rebalancing public finances, and laying the foundation for long-term growth.

In Budget one, we reset. We began repairing a State budget that had been left with unfunded programs, soaring debt and broken service delivery. We made hard decisions to restore stability and credibility: ending the wages cap, redirecting resources, and lifting frontline pay so we could rebuild the public services people rely on.

In Budget two, we responded. We faced a $12 billion GST cut as we wrote the papers – the single biggest federal shock to New South Wales’ revenue base in a generation. But we held our course. We kept inflationary pressure down, reduced expense growth, and delivered major investments in housing, health and education.

Now in Budget three, we accelerate. This Budget is about sequencing reforms to maximise growth. It is about coordinating housing, water, energy, transport, manufacturing and technology – the vital systems that empower our people and secure our prosperity.

This Budget invests in the services our people rely on – better hospitals, better schools, and a stronger public sector.

We are providing help with the cost of living – where and when it counts.

We are building the roads, the rail, and the homes that growing communities need.

And we are modernising our economy – and making sure that people have the skills and education to thrive in it.

And all this means, that at a time of global churn – at a time when stability is prized and predictability commands a premium – New South Wales is one of the best places not just to live, but to invest.

That’s the opportunity that underpins our strategy.

This Budget sends a clear message. 

We are ready to partner with those who want to invest in the future of New South Wales – and the future of our people.

We are thinking long term.

We are planning for the long term.

And we are building a better New South Wales for everyone.

NSW snapshot

Population by area

Population by age

Population by age pie chart. Long description available.

Sources: Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2021 Census. Data across this snapshot reflects the most recent 12-month period available. Time periods may vary.

Text-only accessible version

Population by age pie chart description

The population is fairly equally distributed. From smallest to largest we are shown ages 20 to 29 with 14%, 65+ with 17.7%, 30 to 44 with 21.3%, 19 to 45 with 23.3% and the largest group is zero to 19 with 23.6%.

Share of occupied dwellings

(2021 Census)

Health


226
public hospitals
340,262
surgeries performed
369
community health centres
253
ambulance stations
1.2 million
incidents responded to by NSW Ambulance
3.2 million
emergency department presentations

Emergency services


6,822
Fire and Rescue NSW firefighters
335
fire stations
70,175
NSW Rural Fire Service volunteers
1,984
NSW Rural Fire Service brigades
11,456
NSW State Emergency Service volunteers
262
NSW State Emergency Service units

Police


16,252
police officers
398
operational police stations
1,442,941
incidents attended

Education


2,216
public schools
785,232
public school and preschool students
102
public preschools

Transport


22,929
train services per week
23
train and metro lines
46,333
daily bus services
10,089
bus routes
5,302
ferry services per week
11
ferry routes

Energy transition


48 TWh
(67%)
fossil fuel energy generation
24 TWh
(33%)
renewable energy generation
5,399
public electric vehicle charging ports


Sources: Australian Government, NSW Government.

Driving economic growth to secure our future

0.8%
real wages
through the year WPI growth to the March 2025 quarter

2.3%
inflation
through the year CPI growth to the March 2025 quarter

Budget highlights

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$1.0 billion

for a Pre-Sale Finance Guarantee to help housing developments get finance earlier, fast-tracking more than 5,000 homes and creating 1,500 jobs

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$12.4 billion

to build and upgrade health infrastructure over the next four years

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$10.4 billion

for New South Wales schools over the next 10 years

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$2.8 billion

investment in 2025-26 for TAFE to grow the skilled workforce we need

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$5.5 billion

to build and upgrade roads across Western Sydney

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$50.0 billion

the Investment Delivery Authority expects to assist around 30 large projects per year, potentially bringing forward up to $50.0 billion of investment each year

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$1.2 billion

child protection package to rebuild the out-of-homecare system and better care for our most vulnerable children

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$650.0 million

to support victim survivors and build a safer New South Wales

1. Building a better New South Wales

Delivered

First home buyer support
More than 60,000 first home buyers have received transfer duty discounts averaging around $20,500 since July 2023.

3D-printed social homes
In June 2025, the first 3D-printed social homes from the Government’s $10.0 million Modern Methods of Construction program were completed in Dubbo, ready for residents to move in.

Funding per student

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$14,819
2023
 
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$17,022
2025
 


 

Delivered

New preschools
The Gulyangarri Public Preschool opened in October 2024, with another four preschools to open in 2025-26.

Teacher vacancies
Down by 40 per cent since 2023.

Merged and cancelled classes
Reduced by half since 2023.

Ending Privatisation
The Government has prohibited further public-private partnerships being imposed on the State’s acute hospitals, preventing Northern Beaches Hospital style arrangements.
Delivered
  • 1,083 new public electric vehicle charging ports built in the past year.
  • 1,884 energy-saving upgrades to social housing dwellings in 2024-25.
  • Renewable Energy Zone access rights for renewable energy projects to power 4.3 million homes.
  • NSW has enough renewable energy projects locked in to get us more than halfway to our 2030 target.
  • More than 1 million rooftop solar installations.
  • Emissions in 2024-25 are 20 per cent lower than in 2019-20.
Delivered

Portable long service leave

From 1 July 2025, community sectors workers will have access to a portable long service leave scheme. $30.2 million will build a new digital platform to support the program and attract workers to the sector.

 

Ending Privatisation
The Government has banned the use of unaccredited emergency accommodation for vulnerable children in the out-of-home care system.
Delivered
  • A 71 per cent increase in applications to join the NSW Police Force since 2022.
  • Paying student police officers $1,451 per week plus superannuation and award-based allowances as they train.
  • Police pay increase averaging 19 per cent over four years for non-commissioned officers.
Delivered

A calendar of events supported by Destination NSW, including:

  • 2025 Emerging Matildas Championships
  • 2025 GWM BMX Racing National Championships
  • NSW Waratahs vs British and Irish Lions
  • MJ the Musical
  • TCS Sydney Marathon
  • Vivid Sydney
  • Yolŋu power: the art of Yirrkala at the Art Gallery of New South Wales.

And many more sporting, cultural and artistic events confirmed for 2026.