City of Brampton adopts 2024 Budget
Mayor’s inaugural budget builds the Brampton advantage with the lowest tax increase in the GTA and record-level investments city-wide
Brampton’s 2024 Budget supports the needs of a growing population while making record contributions to reserves and priority investments in infrastructure, transportation, recreational amenities, health care, and community safety.
2024 Budget Highlights
Affordability & Service Excellence
- At 1.9%, the City is delivering a tax increase on the City portion of the tax bill below Canada’s rate of inflation (3.8%) as of September 2023. The increase is less than half of the Region of Peel’s (4.5%), lower than the City of Mississauga’s (2.3%) and the lowest in the GTA.
- $139M – largest ever annual contribution to reserves, inclusive of levies to keep city buses, roads, recreation centres, public spaces, and other infrastructure assets at sustainable levels. The majority will go towards sustaining and enhancing Brampton’s infrastructure.
- $913M Operating Budget; $544M Capital Budget = $1.5B total.
Health Care
- The City has already built up reserve funds of over $74M (as of September 2023) towards the City’s local share of $125M.
- Continuation of a 1% hospital levy to support the construction of a second hospital for Brampton and a new cancer care centre
- Support for the new medical school (opening in 2025)
Transit
- Purchase and refurbishment of buses: $78.4M
- Brampton Transit Züm service expansion on Bramalea Road corridor: $3.8M
- 108,500 new Transit service hours
- 136 New Brampton Transit operators
Recreation
- Embleton Community Centre construction: $79.8M
- Howden Recreation Centre construction: $24.2M
- Tennis, pickleball, basketball, outdoor recreation amenities, dog park and playground enhancements: $6.1M
- Cricket infrastructure and programming: $8M
- Century Gardens Youth Hub construction: $5.5M
- Memorial Arena expansion (construction): $2.5M
- Lawn bowling at FCCC: $900,000
- Basketball court and enhancements at CAA Centre: $525,000
- Artificial turf field at Central Peel: $200,000
- New, inclusive multi-sensory room at Loafer’s Lake Recreation Centre: $100,000
Environment
- Riverwalk phase one (flood protection): $87.3M
- Stormwater capital improvements: $7.9M
- Drainage channel inspection and maintenance program: $1M
- Erosion control and streambank stabilization: $1M
- Minimize energy and emissions through energy efficiency programs: $215,000
- Enhancing community gardens: $100,000
- Chinguacousy Park upgrades: $25,000
Shaped by our Community
This year’s budget, focused on building the Brampton advantage, was developed with feedback from residents and local businesses:
- A pre-budget telephone town hall with over 4,600 residents
- A roundtable hosting 89 businesses
- Five coffee chats with Ward Councillors from across the city
About Brampton’s Budget Development Process The City’s annual budget process engages, educates and informs the citizens of Brampton through communications and engagement efforts, including telephone town halls, coffee chats, advertisements, news releases, social media, and the City’s budget website.
This year’s budget supports the City of Brampton’s Corporate Strategic Plan 2022-2026. This critical document will provide a structure to prioritize and deliver what is most important to the community. The plan is a living plan that sets the context for the City’s budget master plans, projects, services, and resources.
Additional Resources
- To review the 2024 Budget highlights, please visit www.Brampton.ca/budget.
- If you require this document in an alternate format, please submit a request to accessibility@brampton.ca.
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“I am very pleased that the 2024 Budget is now adopted. This budget demonstrates our commitment to building the Brampton advantage. This is a budget for jobs, for families, for recreation, for transit, for health care, and for community safety. I would like to thank my Council colleagues, City staff and you – the taxpayers of Brampton – for providing feedback, ideas, and helping us successfully develop this budget.”– Patrick Brown, Mayor, City of Brampton