Details of the 2025 Budget
How the budget is built, funded, and used.
On this page

How the Budget is built
Budget development timeline
- March, April 2024 Develop preliminary budget and business plans based on Executive Leadership Team direction
- June 13, 2024Approach to the Development of the 2025 Budget (council report)
- September 4, 2024 Executive Leadership Team review of final budget and budget requests
- November 21, 20242025 Operating and Capital Budget (council report)
- 2025 Fees and Charges (council report)
- 2024 Overview and Update on the Status of Reserves (council report)
- Improvements in Service Delivery (council report)
- Enterprise Asset Management Update
2025 Budget presentations
- November 21, 2024Regional Budget corporate overview presentation
- November 28, 2024 Regional services budget presentations
- December 5, 2024 Conservation authorities budget presentations
- December 12, 2024 Additional Budget deliberation
Download Budget documents
How the Budget is funded
What the average property tax bill funds.
Property taxes help fund the budget. The property taxes are divided between Peel Region services, local municipal services, and education.
The proportions vary between the local municipalities, depending on several factors including the relative share of total assessed market value by the Municipal Property Assessment Corporation (MPAC).
1 The education portion (residential only) of the combined tax bill has not increased for over 20 years.
How the Budget is used
The portion of your property taxes that goes to Peel Region provides residents and businesses with essential services such as: running water, roads and traffic lights, police departments, waste services, affordable housing, vaccination clinics, and so much more.
Every $1 of property taxes collected contributes to these Peel Region services:
- Peel Regional Police, 46 cents
- Housing Support, 13 cents
- Waste Management, 8 cents
- Transportation, 8 cents
- Paramedic Services, 6 cents
- Seniors Services, 3 cents
- Public Health, 3 cents
- Income Support, 2 cents
- Business Services, 2 cents
- Conservation Authorities, 2 cents
- Early Years and Child Care, 1 cent
- Community Investment, 1 cent
- Information and Technology, 1 cent
- Assessment Services, 1 cent
- Capital Allocation, 1 cent
- Real Property and Asset Management, less than 1 cent
- Heritage, Arts and Culture, less than 1 cent
- Development Services, less than 1 cent
- Clerks, less than 1 cent
- Regional Chair and Council, less than 1 cent

Public Works Capital Budget maps
Large-scale map images showing the locations of planned capital projects.
