Gov. Spencer Cox’s new budget proposal for the next fiscal year is roughly equivalent to this past year’s — though the Republican governor said federal funding cuts passed in President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” will impact Utah’s future spending.
“It’s a little bit tighter budget this year for sure,” Cox told The Salt Lake Tribune editorial board and journalists Tuesday afternoon.
The $30.7 billion proposal officially released Wednesday morning is “flat,” Cox said, compared to the $30.8 billion budget passed by state lawmakers for the current fiscal year.
The latest budget recommendation comes after five years in a row of cuts to state income taxes. And Cox’s proposal is just that: a proposal. The budget is ultimately determined by the Legislature, which will meet early next year.
Cox unveiled the proposal publicly Wednesday morning during a presentation at the Salt Lake County library in Kearns, a location chosen, he said, to emphasize the budget’s commitment to literacy. There, following the presentation, first lady Abby Cox read a book — “Snow! Snow! Snow!” by Lee Harper — to a group of children while the governor looked on.
“I think as a state... we have led out on holding social media companies accountable and having that awareness of how dangerous social media is for our children,” Abby Cox said during Wednesday’s news conference. “But what have we replaced it with? There’s a big hole, and the hole is right here. This is what we fill it with. We fill it with books.”
(Bethany Baker | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah first lady Abby Cox reads to children following a press conference on the 2027 fiscal budget at Kearns Library in Kearns on Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025.
As part of his budget proposal, Cox is pushing for $500,000 for a public literacy awareness campaign, which he said Wednesday would include advertising and billboards, and would also be supported by private donors.
In total, Cox’s proposal includes a $654 million education budget, down from his recommendation of $759 million for this fiscal year. It includes $60 million for “targeted behavioral interventions” in kindergarten through third-grade classes; $20 million for reading support in elementary schools with fewer than 70% of students meeting benchmark reading levels; and more than $53 million for school safety improvements.
“I realized that this was incredibly important and that we needed to focus on literacy this coming year,” Cox said Wednesday.
[READ: ‘We must ... keep building’: See what Gox. Cox wants for Utahns in his new budget proposal]
Among other requests, Cox wants a 2.6% cost-of-living wage increase for state employees.
He’s also looking for about $25 million in one-time funds and $20 million in ongoing funds for homelessness — largely expected to go to a controversial campus in Salt Lake City.
“We want to make sure that people are not camping on our streets, are not making life dangerous for people who want to take their kids out and walk down the sidewalk and go to our parks,” Cox said Wednesday. “And we want to get services to those who are struggling with addiction or mental health.”
The governor is also proposing $7.6 million for school lunch assistance, $5 million for the Great Salt Lake and an expansion of the child tax credit for families with children up to three years old.
Cox is also proposing $1.9 million in funds be allocated for the state’s use of artificial intelligence tools.
“[We have] some initiatives around that that aren’t really dollar intensive, but are important to prepare the workforce for the future, making sure our students know how to use AI in the right ways and not in ways that harm them,” Cox said Tuesday.
His office, he added, is also thinking about “how to use AI in government to make us more efficient,” as well as making sure that “artificial intelligence is pro-human and that we really are more cautious with it.”
(Bethany Baker | The Salt Lake Tribune) The sun sets over the Utah Capitol on the last day of the legislative session in Salt Lake City on Friday, March 7, 2025.
The proposal also includes a $3 million investment in victim services for domestic violence and sexual assault intervention programs.
“We recognize the importance of these life-saving services,” Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson said Tuesday during the editorial board meeting. “This additional funding will help extend those critical services to those who need them.”
Cox is not proposing an income tax cut, nor is he asking for new full-time employees in the state’s executive branch as part of his budget.
Instead, he said, Utahns will be getting tax relief from the “One Big Beautiful Bill,” which Trump signed into law in July. The legislation made tax cuts originally passed in 2017 permanent.
“No taxes on tips, for example, that gets incorporated into what we’re doing,” Cox said Wednesday. “There were also new tax reductions that go to businesses in that bill.”
But outside the $300 million tax reduction for Utahns, state leaders, he said, “haven’t had any direct conversations about anything above and beyond that.”
Asked whether he would support an additional income tax reduction should the Legislature push for that, Cox noted that he’s supported those reductions in the past, but said, “More important to me is what is our overarching tax policy going to be in the years that come?”
The governor said he’s supported removing the state’s income tax and would again in the future, but, he added, “it’s impossible for us to get rid of the income tax and still be able to function as a state government. So what are we going to replace that with? I don’t think people want their property taxes to go up.”
Cox presented his budget proposal to legislative leaders Tuesday. He told reporters Wednesday that the reaction was “positive” and that conversations with lawmakers about their own priorities had informed his proposals.
“We didn’t have any negative feedback. Of course, they’ll save that for the legislative session,” Cox said with a laugh. “We know how this dance works.”
And although the $300 million loss in expected funds is only about 1% of the state’s coffers, he said the loss meant many agencies that requested increased funds will not receive them.
“That’s where we’ve had to say, ‘We just don’t have it,’” Cox said of requests for additional social services funding from some state agencies. “Again, with the exception of homelessness, where we’re trying to invest more.”