Title
Fiscal Transparency and Inventory of Programs Budget Document - Citywide
Description
This report transmits the Fiscal Year 2025-26 Inventory of Programs budget document to the City Council and community.
Report
Summary
The Inventory of Programs budget document was created in response to the City Council’s request for a more transparent, relevant, and detailed presentation of the City’s budget. The document provides a comprehensive review of more than 365 City programs, and includes costs, revenues, funding sources, staffing levels, performance measures, and other key budget details.
The Inventory of Programs provides a unique and important presentation of the City’s budget. It presents the budget by program, and achieves several goals, including:
- Providing a detailed and relevant presentation of the City’s budget, allowing the City Council and community to review the budget of every program using a zero-based budgeting approach.
- Providing the City Council with budget and program information at an earlier stage in the annual budget development process.
- Improving the overall accessibility and understandability of the budget by packaging it in a user-friendly format for Phoenix residents.
Budget Development Process
The City is committed to helping residents understand how their tax dollars are used and to making the budget process transparent, accessible, and easily understood. To that end, the City has one of the most open and accessible budget processes in the country. Phoenix has received a Distinguished Budget Presentation Award from the Government Finance Officers Association for 39 consecutive years.
The City makes the Inventory of Programs available early in the annual budget development process, providing the City Council and community the opportunity to review the current year budget and to begin considering what changes they might recommend for next year's budget. The Inventory of Programs provides information from both the current and prior year budgets. This provides helpful context to budget data and performance measures.
The Inventory of Programs document is provided on the Budget and Research website at phoenix.gov/budget and is designed to be easily reviewed electronically with a table of contents, navigation links throughout the document, and full word search capability.
The release of the Inventory of Programs marks a significant early milestone in the budget process. That process continues in early 2026 with the presentation of the preliminary 2026-27 General Fund Budget Status and the Multi-Year General Fund Forecast. These documents provide a strategic and long-term view of the City budget, offering key information to guide budget discussion and decision making. Following the release of these documents, the City Manager's Trial Budget will be presented in March 2026, which includes greater detail on the proposed 2026-27 Budget.
The Trial Budget will then be brought to the community during community budget hearings in April. Budget hearings will be available both in-person and virtually, providing greater flexibility for residents to participate. Additionally, English and Spanish interpretation services will be available at all budget hearings. Residents can also provide input via online forms, email, and telephone. All community feedback is shared with the City Council routinely so it can be considered ahead of final budget decision making.
The Proposed Budget is scheduled for two meetings in the month of May, the second of which is intended for City Council action. The two Council meetings in May ensure the Mayor and Council have sufficient opportunity to consider feedback from the community on the proposed budget, and fully evaluate, question, and discuss the budget prior to taking action. In June and July, tentative and final budget information is published in official newspapers, additional hearings are posted and conducted, and final legally required actions are taken.
Resources Available
Currently, the phoenix.gov webpage provides access to a wealth of information on the City’s budget and finances. Listed below are additional resources on the Budget and Research (phoenix.gov/budget) and Finance (phoenix.gov/finance) departments’ web pages:
- Inventory of Programs.
- Summary Budget.
- Detail Budget.
- Five-year Capital Improvement Program.
- Budget-related documents and reports to City Council.
- Contact information for the Budget and Research and Finance Departments.
- Annual Comprehensive Financial Reports.
- Monthly Financial Reports.
- Popular Annual Financial Reports.
- Online City Checkbook.
- Investor information.
- Annual Single Audit detailing grant program expenditures.
Also on the phoenix.gov home page is a link to “Find Public Records," which provides public access to all types of City documents, including City Council meeting minutes, requests for City Council action, ordinances, resolutions, contracts, and reports.
Inventory of Programs Information
The Inventory of Programs budget document contains a variety of information, as identified below.
Citywide and General Fund Information
A breakdown of Citywide operating expenditures by category and fund source, operating fund revenue by source, and the number of volunteer hours for each department is provided. Expenditure categories include:
- Personal services (total compensation costs, including all wages and benefits).
- Contractual services (payments made to outside vendors and contractors, including all outsourced services).
- Supplies, equipment, and minor capital improvements.
- Interdepartmental charges (work order charges from one department to another based on internal services provided, where appropriate).
- Necessary transfers between funds.
Actuals Comparison
Annual actual expenditures for recent years in all the budget categories described above are provided.
Staff Costs Overview
This section provides detail on staffing costs (also referred to as “personal services”) for all funds and for the General Fund. It describes the major components of staff costs (salaries and wages, benefits, payroll taxes, and other legally required costs) and their budgeted amounts.
Citywide Department Information
The Inventory of Programs provides department-specific information, including:
- Department status overview of enhancements, priorities, and challenges.
- Department-specific revenue and budget summary.
- For departments receiving volunteer assistance, description of volunteer services in applicable programs and the number of volunteer hours provided.
- The total cost for each department program (net and gross), including the administrative cost.
- The primary strategic plan area supported by each program.
- Staffing, or total full-time equivalent (FTE), for each program, including full-time, temporary, and part-time staff.
- Program fund source, which may be a single fund, such as the General Fund, or a combination of funds, such as grants, special revenue funds, and General Fund.
- For applicable programs, service level trends illustrated by budgeted performance measures.
- Information on whether the program provides matching funds for a grant-funded program.
Zero-Based Estimates and Detailed Technical Expenditure Reviews
Each fall, a thorough technical analysis, or detailed line-item review, is performed for the current year’s budget. Every department works with Budget and Research staff to review all budget line-items, making adjustments to reflect anticipated cost savings and ensure accurate forecasts.
At the same time, the City develops estimates for every budget line-item for the next fiscal year’s budget. It is important to note that every line-item of the budget starts at zero dollars. This is an important cost-control element of the budget process, helping to ensure new cost estimates are prepared each year and preventing the automatic extension or increase of current budgeted costs. The final amounts in each line-item are new estimates necessary to continue existing City Council-adopted service levels for each program. In projecting annual personal services costs (total employee compensation), estimates are based on the number of positions authorized by the City Council and on the specific compensation configuration for each individual position.
Department
Responsible Department
This item is submitted by City Manager Jeffrey Barton, Deputy City Manager Amber Williamson and the Budget and Research Department.