Top 5 Takeaways From the Massachusetts House Fiscal Year 2026 Budget Proposal

On April 30, 2025, the Massachusetts House finalized its $61.5 billion budget proposal for Fiscal Year 2026 (FY26). The House demonstrated strong support for early education and child care, dedicating a combined $1.7 billion ($1.68 billion in the FY2026 budget and $55.5 million in a supplemental budget*) to the sector. This is almost $200 million more than in the final Fiscal Year 2025 (FY25) state budget.

Top 5 Takeaways From the House Budget:

  1. Commonwealth Cares for Children (C3) Operational Grants is level-funded. C3 is level-funded for the third year at $475 million. However, with the number of providers in the sector growing and the costs of providing care dramatically increasing, $475 million will not go as far as it has in past years. It’s possible that, FY26, we may not see the same positive impacts on salary increases and tuition stabilizations as we have in years past. 

  2. Funding for the Child Care Financial Assistance (CCFA) program significantly increased. Appropriations to CCFA increased by $1.03 billion, with an additional $20 million added by the supplemental budget for rate increases for early education and family child care providers. This public investment is crucial for stabilizing the CCFA program, but may not be enough to reopen the 30,000 child income-eligible waitlist or to extend financial assistance to families recently made eligible for the program. 

  3. The Department of Early Education and Child Care’s (EEC) administration budget was cut. If this is not remedied in the final state budget, due by July 1st, the cut may lead to a reduction in Department staffing.  

  4. Key EEC programs have been level funded. The House proposal continues funding for: scholarships for early educators, Resource and Referral Agencies, Head Start, and Early Childhood Mental Health Supports, all at the same level as FY25.

  5. Massachusetts' state budget proposal is dependent on what happens with the federal budget. The Massachusetts budget depends heavily on federal funds ($16 billion overall; $2 billion for education). Of note, the Governor’s proposal and the House proposal both assume that the state will receive all of its anticipated revenue from the federal government and state tax dollars. Given the federal political climate and the state budget’s reliance on federal funds to support early education and care and other important safety net programs, the state budget could dramatically change if the federal government significantly cuts critical federal funding for education, early education, and other social services.

For more details on the budget and how it compares to the Governor’s proposal and to the final FY25 budget, check out our fact sheets here.

 *The supplemental budget uses unanticipated Fair Share funds from FY2025.
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