Highland Council Budget Challenge 2026/27
Our Future Highland: Highland Council Budget Challenge 2026/27
The public sector continues to face significant financial challenges – local council budgets are decreasing, costs are increasing, and there’s greater demands on services.

The Highland Council is being proactive in how we approach these challenges. Budgets are being squeezed, but we have a strategy which includes growing the number of houses - helping address the housing challenge and providing more income in council tax - changing the way we work to create more jobs across the region, being more entrepreneurial, and ensuring we see community benefit from energy infrastructure investment.
But we still have difficult decisions to make when it comes to our services. The council has a £818 million revenue budget to deliver a range of services including education, adult social care, housing, welfare, and waste and recycling services, as well as sustaining roads, footpaths, bridges, and harbours. Government funding is based on population. With more schools per head of population than any other mainland council and over 4000 miles of road to sustain we need to budget carefully to manage our geographical differences.

We need your help to decide how we spend our budget for 2026-27, which will be confirmed by the Scottish Government in January 2026. Feedback from our communities will help councillors understand what matters most to people across Highland and help inform the decisions they take when setting the budget in March 2026.
Our approach
The Highland Council is working hard to deliver savings – we’ve delivered £217 million in savings over the past 12 years.
We’ve also taken a more proactive approach to address the pressures we face, supporting more entrepreneurial activity and a culture of innovation to drive incomes and growth through ‘Our Future Highland.’ This includes projects like:
- Our Highland Investment Plan. We are setting aside 2% of council tax revenue each year to fund a £2 billion investment plan over the next 20 years. This money will support capital investment in local service points, roads, and schools. This includes the replacement or refurbishment of around 90 schools.
- The Highland Social Value Charter. We are working with developers to encourage them to commit to our Social Value Charter. This ensures community benefit and a legacy from renewable investment over the next 20 years. Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks (SSEN) Transmission is the first company to sign this Charter, committing to a £200 million investment in roads and bridges, £100 million investment in homes, and over 2200 jobs.
- Entrepreneurial activity. We’ve cut costs by running our own bus service and made public transport improvements for local communities. Meanwhile, the Council-run Storr visitor attraction in Skye is supporting local jobs and local suppliers. It generated around £450,000 in profit in its first year, which has supported reinvestment in the path network and public toilets.
At the same time, the council is developing its own future operating model to support sustainable communities. Our focus is on job roles across our region, flexible workspaces, better use of technology, seamless access to services through local points of delivery, and greater collaboration with partners.
Our proactive approach to financial sustainability and cultural transformation has been commended by Audit Scotland.
The budget challenge we face
We are forecasting a budget gap of £16.3 million in 2026/2027, £16.2 million in 2027/2028, and £14.2 million in 2028/2029.

Listening to our communities
As part of addressing this gap, we want to work with our communities to find out what services are important to you, get your views on where we can save money, how we can generate more income, and how we could do things differently.
This will build on extensive engagement on our budget in 2023, when communities told us we needed to redesign our services, change how we manage our buildings, generate more income, and be more efficient in how we do things. We’ve already started to do these things, and we’ll continue to work hard on this.
This is your opportunity to have your say.
Have your say
- Complete the budget survey online – it only takes 5-10 minutes to complete and is an opportunity for you to share your thoughts on what services we prioritise. Our survey is also available in paper form in libraries and service points.
- Post your ideas on our discussion board - this board allows you to quickly share ideas on how we make savings, do things differently or generate income. We’re particularly interested in what you think about:
- Should we increase Council Tax on second homes and long-term empty properties?
- How can we generate more income? This could include things like car parking, garden waste bins, school meals, or service fees.
- How can we encourage people to make better use of public transport?
- What services do you want to be able to access locally?
- What could the council do more of in-house or out-source to save money?

What happens next?
Councillors will take on board your views and use them to help shape the budget proposal for 2026/27, which will be presented to a meeting of the Highland Council at the end of March for discussion.