/ Categories: Budget/Approps

Budget Watch - General Revenue Estimates Increased by $392 Million

The General Revenue (GR) Estimating Conference met on January 15 to develop a new revenue forecast for Florida. These estimates of available GR are used by the Legislature in meeting its constitutional mandate to pass a balanced budget. The new estimate provides the Governor and Legislature some good news.

The GR Conference increased the estimate of collections by $306.0 million in the current year and $86.0 million in FY2020-21—a two-year total of $392.0 million. When coupled with other changes—such as more unspent GR from FY2018-19 rolling forward into FY2019-20—lawmakers have $567.1 million more available for the next budget than was anticipated when the Long-Range Financial Outlook was released last September (see Table 2). The Outlook predicted budget writers would have a surplus of $174.2 million after funding a continuation budget for FY2020-21 (before any tax cuts or trust fund sweeps).

These new estimates recoup some of the money lost from the previous estimate (August 2109), which reduced the forecast for GR by $867.7 million over the two years. Even with the increase, the total amount of GR now expected to be collected in FY2019-20 ($33.2 billion) is still less than collections in the prior year ($33.4 billion). A drop in net GR collections from one year to the next is a rare occurrence in Florida, happening only after the Great Recession. This decrease in FY2019-20 is due to the loss of all Indian Gaming Revenue and a windfall in corporate income taxes collected in FY2018-19—resulting from the federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act—that is being refunded to taxpayers this year.

Positive annual GR growth is expected to resume next year, which estimated growth of 3.6 percent in both FY2020-21 and FY2021-22. This is despite a slight reduction in the estimate of collections for FY2020-21 of $25.5 million.

Documents to download

Previous Article We Can’t Wait on Water
Next Article An Accurate Count in the 2020 Census is Vital for Florida
Print
2876
0Upvote 0Downvote
«October 2025»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
2930
Interdisciplinary Pain Management As a Means to Help Address Solvency of the State Employees' Health Insurance Trust Fund

Interdisciplinary Pain Management As a Means to Help Address Solvency of the State Employees' Health Insurance Trust Fund

With the Trust Fund projected to face a nearly $1.7 billion shortfall by FY 2029-30 without action, Florida TaxWatch outlines a pragmatic path that reduces costs by treating pain more effectively—not just shifting them to employees.

Read more
1
Could Florida Experience a Significant Water Shortage?

Could Florida Experience a Significant Water Shortage?

New EDR projections show a widening state funding gap—more than $50 million in FY 2025-26—with total demand still trending upward through 2045.

Read more
23
New Labor Data Shows Weaker Labor Market Than Previously Expected

New Labor Data Shows Weaker Labor Market Than Previously Expected

Since January 2025, the federal interest rate has remained unchanged at 4.25 to 4.5 percent. The rates have been steady in hopes of curbing inflation and bringing it down to two percent, as unemployment numbers were not concerning until now. The latest revision data, however, will likely push the Federal Reserve to cut rates in their next meeting this month to 4.00 to 4.25 percent.

Read more
45
6789101112
1314151617
2025 Florida TaxWatch Annual Report

2025 Florida TaxWatch Annual Report

The 2025 Florida TaxWatch Annual Report captures a milestone year: the culmination of Dominic M. Calabro’s decades of leadership and the announced transition to Lt. Governor Jeff Kottkamp as incoming President & CEO on January 1, 2026.

Read more
1819
20212223242526
272829303112
3456789

Archive