Virginia’s budget will change before it’s adopted. Here’s what the total operating budget of just under $200 billion includes.

Budget season has begun.

Gov. Glenn Youngkin kicked it off this month when he presented the last proposal of his term before the legislature’s money committees. It includes a substantial increase in spending for Medicaid and K-12 re-benchmarking, as well as some tax relief.

But over the course of the General Assembly session, lawmakers will make changes before Gov.-Elect Abigail Spanberger eventually signs off.

Here’s how the budget process works, and what experts say about reading it for yourself:

Passing a budget

Virginia’s budget operates on a two-year cycle, called the biennium. Each biennium begins in odd-numbered fiscal years. For example, Virginia’s current operating budget was passed and signed in 2024 and governs fiscal 2024 through 2026 — that’s July 1, 2024 through June 30, 2026.

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The governor proposes a budget in December, and during the legislative session at the start of the new year, lawmakers hear from agencies and organizations seeking funds and propose their own amendments. The House and Senate money committees each propose their own version of a budget bill, then they hash out the differences. The amended budget then goes to the governor, who can amend or veto line items before signing the bill into law.

In even years, during a longer legislative session, the General Assembly determines the budget for the next two years. That’s what will happen in 2026. Lawmakers can also amend the existing budget — what’s known as the caboose bill. In odd years, they amend the existing budget as revenue and expenses change.

Reading a budget

The state’s budget proposal is available online at budget.lis.virginia.gov.

“I think the important thing is to start at the top line and look at what’s actually available for investment,” said Megan Davis, a senior policy analyst at the Commonwealth Institute, a left-leaning economic think tank. “Lawmakers have a lot of control over general funds and where those go.

“So we look for growth in general funds, make sure that it’s keeping up with the appropriations that you want to be making, and also look at how those are invested.”

Virginia’s revenue is divided into two categories: general funds and non-general funds. Non-general funds, which account for nearly two-thirds of the budget, have to by law be spent on certain things. Student tuition, for example, must go toward higher education. On the other hand, most of the general funds come from sources such as the individual income tax, the sales and use tax and corporate income taxes.

“Non-general funds are less flexible,” Davis said. “A lot of them are obligated or come from certain sources, like federal block grants are for things like Medicaid or (the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program)…General funds, you can have more flexibility about the types of funding that you increase or change and those are administered.”

The state has certain obligations it’s must fulfil, like Medicaid, SNAP, and K-12 education.

“There’s what we consider the base budget,” Davis said. “We’re considering the fiscal year 2026 budget, and that’s the starting point of things that the state has already committed to. There’s going to be adjustments in terms of projections for K-12 and Medicaid, etc., and other technical adjustments to that base budget. And we get new revenue projections, those get added in as well, and that kind of gives a figure of what in addition to the base budget lawmakers can fund.”

The general fund revenues is money the governor and General Assembly can use at their discretion.

Current budget proposal

Here’s how that plays out in this year’s budget proposal.

The total general fund resources for the fiscal 2026 caboose — that’s the bill to adjust the existing 2024 to 2026 budget — is about $34.1 billion. In fiscal 2027 and 2028, Youngkin’s budget forecasts general fund revenue to be $34 billion and $35.1 billion. The total general fund budget over the biennium comes out to $72 billion, which does not include the caboose.

The top three general fund appropriations go towards K-12 education; the Department of Medical Assistance Services, which administers Medicaid; and higher education.

The total operating budget, which includes general and non-general funds but excludes capital project expenditures, is just under $200 billion across the two-year time frame.

Kate Seltzer, 757-713-7881, kate.seltzer@virginiamedia.com

https://www.pilotonline.com/2025/12/23/virginias-budget-will-change-before-its-adopted-heres-what-the-total-budget-of-just-under-200-billion-includes/