News

Councillors approve Waltham Forest’s 2026/27 budget

The new fiscal plan will see the Labour-led authority accept a £19million loan from the government and hike council tax by 4.99%, reports Sebastian Mann, Local Democracy Reporter

Waltham Forest Town Hall

Waltham Forest councillors have approved the budget for 2026/27.

The new fiscal plan will see the Labour-led authority accept a £19million loan from the government and hike council tax by 4.99%.

Residents living in an average band-D property will pay an extra £113 a year after the changes come into effect on 1st April.

Council leader Grace Williams told councillors last night (26th February) there is “very much in the world we cannot control,” such as “inflation, interest rates, and the cost of borrowing”.

The Waltham Forest Conservatives unsuccessfully tabled a motion to prevent council tax going up by cutting staff figures and equipment budgets.

Conservative councillor Afzal Akram said the tax hike was a “confession of failure” and condemned the council for asking residents to pay more “at a time of significant pressure”

Meanwhile, the loan will effectively function as a line of credit the council can draw from as and when it needs to.

Finance officials previously said they would only use it if it was “absolutely necessary”. Once a council draws from an ‘exceptional financial support’ pot, then it becomes an active loan with interest.

Cllr Williams said it would “help us protect our services that matter most to people” while “balancing the budget in the short term”.

She says it would help keep £30m in the council’s reserves and remove the need for further borrowing. The council had £130m in the pot in 2022, when the current administration was voted in.

In early September, Waltham Forest councillors were told it was set to go over budget by £31.4m.

The main focus of spending over the next year will be on social care and housing, which accounts for 72% of the council’s current expenditure.

Cllr Williams previously described the loan as “financially responsible and morally correct”.

The move was again criticised by the Waltham Forest Conservatives, who sit as the official opposition.

Group leader Emma Best, also a Londonwide Assembly member, referred to the loan as a “£19m credit card on the back of residents” while Tory deputy leader Akram called the borrowing a “foundation built on sand”.

During the meeting, councillors voted to keep their salaries at £13,085.


No news is bad news 

Independent news outlets like ours – reporting for the community without rich backers – are under threat of closure, turning British towns into news deserts. 

The audiences they serve know less, understand less, and can do less. 

If our coverage has helped you understand our community a little bit better, please consider supporting us with a monthly, yearly or one-off donation. 

Choose the news. Don’t lose the news.

Monthly direct debit 

Annual direct debit

£5 per month supporters get a digital copy of each month’s paper before anyone else, £10 per month supporters get a digital copy of each month’s paper before anyone else and a print copy posted to them each month.  £50 annual supporters get a digital copy of each month's paper before anyone else.

Donate now with Pay Pal

More information on supporting us monthly or annually 

More Information about donations

Our newspaper and website are made possible by the support of readers and by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please consider helping us to continue to bring you news by disabling your ad blocker or supporting us with a small regular payment.