Newquay Town Council Approves 2026/27 Budget with Continued Investment in Local Services
Newquay Town Council has approved its 2026/27 budget, focusing on protecting local services, responding to rising costs and delivering the priorities identified by the community through public consultation and the Council’s Corporate Plan.
Date :
22nd January
Categories :
The budget follows extensive work by Councillors and Town Council officers, including detailed reviews of services, staffing and future pressures, to ensure the Council is operating efficiently while continuing to support the people of Newquay.
Council Tax and the 2026/27 Budget
For 2026/27, the Town Council has approved a total expenditure budget of £3,948,460.18, supported by a council tax precept of £3,387,796.
For residents, this represents an increase of 93p per week for the Town Council element of council tax for a Band D property. Despite this increase, Newquay’s Band D charge remains lower than that of many other comparable Cornish towns, including some smaller authorities.
Reasons for the Budget Increase
The budget increase reflects a combination of rising costs, changes in income and the growing number of services now being managed locally.
Staffing costs have increased due to national Living Wage and National Insurance changes, alongside continued rises in energy and general operating costs.
The budget has also been affected by changes in Second Homes Council Tax income. While the introduction of double council tax on second homes was intended to support local services, Newquay has seen a 14% reduction in second homes. This has reduced the number of properties contributing to the second homes premium and, in turn, reduced income available to the Town Council.
Newquay council is also in the process of taking on additional responsibilities to safeguard vital services and assets from cuts at county level.
Staff Review and Corporate Plan Delivery
As part of the budget process, Newquay Town Council undertook a comprehensive staff and organisational review informed by public feedback and the Council’s Corporate Plan.
The Corporate Plan was developed based on what residents said mattered most to them. In response, the Council has restructured to better align services with these priorities, creating a more streamlined, efficient and effective organisation focused on delivering what the community has asked for.
We are transforming the Council and its governance so we can better serve Newquay.
Protecting Local Services and Community Assets
The 2026/27 budget includes investment to protect, maintain and regenerate key community facilities and spaces, including the Marcus Hill site, Mount Wise Gardens and play area, the Youth Centre, Godolphin football grounds and Mount Wise garages.
Funding is also allocated for the ongoing maintenance of public conveniences, council-managed car parks at the Gannel and South Fistral, parks, open spaces, footpaths and flowerbeds across the town.
Our goal is to safeguard services that would otherwise be at risk following reductions in county-level funding.
Key Local Services and Projects
The budget continues to support town-wide community events, the Council’s multi-award winning CCTV service, community grants for local organisations and volunteer-led projects, and services already devolved from Cornwall Council, including the library, Killacourt Open Space, South Fistral Play Park and Car Park, and the council offices.
Environmental and Climate Commitments
Newquay Town Council remains committed to improving environmental sustainability through investment in greener technologies and energy-saving measures, biodiversity initiatives across parks and open spaces, and partnership working to improve Newquay’s green and blue spaces.
Second Homes and Supporting Residents
The Council continues to apply double council tax on second homes to help subsidise the cost of delivering services for people who live in Newquay year-round. While this policy has contributed to changes in second home ownership locally, it remains an important measure to support fairness for residents and has been factored into the Council’s financial planning.
Long-Term Planning and Financial Resilience
The 2026/27 budget reflects long-term planning to ensure readiness for potential future changes in service responsibilities. Investment and reserves are being managed prudently to protect key services, respond to emerging pressures and maintain overall financial resilience.
The Mayor, Cllr Drew Creek said “It is right for us to recognise the continued pressures on our budgets from national decisions around wages and, of course, the ever-present inflationary pressures. That said, we worked hard to not increase our precept last year, recognising these pressures face all our community. It should be recognised that we have some second homeowners here in Newquay that have chosen to exploit loopholes to reduce their contributions to our community, which reduced by 14% and goes to highlight the problem second homeowners continue to place on our town.
Whilst other town and parish councils, and indeed Cornwall Council, are having to raise precepts and scale back services in response to ongoing financial pressures, Newquay Town Council is taking a different approach. Our increase is in line with other large towns in Cornwall, but we are bucking the trend by continuing to invest and deliver more services year on year. That includes our brand-new play park, larger community events such as our Christmas celebrations which residents consistently tell us they want more of, increased local grant funding, and this year bringing the Youth Centre fully on stream. We are also significantly expanding provision there to better support families and young people, from early years through into working age. This represents a real step change after more than 15 years of austerity that has steadily eroded local services.”
This budget reflects Newquay Town Council’s commitment to balancing rising costs, changes in income and community priorities, while continuing to protect local services and invest in
Newquay’s future. Now that the budget has been set, in the coming days and weeks, we will be publishing much more detailed information about the budget and what your Council is doing locally.
If you have any questions that are not answered by the information we publish on the website, social media or in printed form in the Library, please contact us and we will endeavour to help provide an answer.
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