New York State Gov. Kathy Hochul announced a $260 billion budget proposal in Albany on Tuesday for the fiscal year, which begins April 1. The budget includes measures to enhance affordability and drive economic growth, without raising taxes.
“With so much uncertainty coming out of Washington, [the budget] plan must be resilient enough to navigate a range of potential detours,” Hochul wrote in an introductory message in her 2027 Executive Budget Briefing Book. “We are confronting two truths at once: we have real momentum here in New York, and we face real volatility ahead. Our task is to sustain our momentum while continuing to make responsible choices that keep our state economically secure.”
Hochul’s plan includes a $1.7 billion increase for expanded childcare as the centerpiece of her push to curb New Yorkers’ high living costs.
Buoyed by Wall Street earnings that have driven up income tax collections, New York can afford a childcare boost and continue yearly increases in school aid and Medicaid, Hochul, who is running for reelection this year, declared with her budget. And it can do so despite cuts from Washington, D.C., that are forcing the state to pay $3 billion more for Medicaid alone, she said.
The budget allocates $400 million to the New York Works Economic Development Fund, an initiative designed to stimulate business growth, attract new companies and create jobs. In addition, it includes $100 million for a second round of the Promote Opportunity with Electric Readiness for Underdeveloped Properties Fund, which prepares underdeveloped sites for advanced manufacturing.
High-tech innovation and quantum research are another focus of the budget’s economic development initiatives. It includes $100 million for the Quantum Research and Innovation Hub at SUNY Stony Brook to advance research and commercialization in quantum technologies. Another $60 million would establish four additional Quantum Technology Commercialization Hubs across the state, serving as regional anchors for start-ups and high-tech entrepreneurship.
And $150 million is set aside for the Regional Economic Development Council program to continue supporting regional economic planning and investment, while $200 million is allocated to the Downtown Revitalization Initiative and New York Forward to revitalize downtown areas and attract residents, visitors and businesses. The budget also provides $50 million for the County Infrastructure Grant Program.
The state is also investing in advanced manufacturing and technology. A total of $25 million would establish a Semiconductor Chip Design Center that connects New York’s downstate knowledge economy to upstate manufacturing. An additional $10 million would launch the Manufacturing Modernization Program, which supports small and mid-sized manufacturers in adopting new technologies.
Life sciences and biotechnology would receive $65 million through the Bolstering Biotech Initiative, to foster New York’s position in life sciences research, development and commercialization.
Arts, culture and community revitalization are also supported in the budget. The New York State Council on the Arts will administer $100 million in grants to support a wide range of arts and cultural initiatives across the state. The Saving Performing Arts and Cultural Experiences program would receive $10 million to help nonprofit performing arts organizations acquire venues, fostering the arts and tourism.
The budget also includes $30 million in direct payments to New York’s farmers to help support the state’s agriculture sector, and offset increasing costs triggered by tariffs.
Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman, a Republican who is also running for governor, took aim at Hochul’s budget. “There’s no income tax relief, no property tax relief, no utility cost relief — nothing that helps families and seniors keep up with the rising cost of living,” he said in a statement.
In her budget speech, Hochul took shots at the Trump administration and at New York’s Republican House members for the funding cuts New York faces through the massive package of federal tax and spending cuts enacted in Washington, D.C. last year. She also alluded to attempts by the Trump administration to withhold funds from Democratic-led states, such as the looming threat to stop funds to states and cities that limit immigration enforcement cooperation.
“The newest, most unpredictable challenge is something very different,” she said of New York’s economic challenges. “Direct attacks on states by the Trump administration.”
Hochul’s presentation and set of budget bills marked the opening of discussions with lawmakers on a budget for the fiscal year that starts April 1.
Reuters contributed to this report.