Politics & Government
Hunter Mill Meetings Set To Collect FY2026 Budget Proposal Input
A proposed 1.5 cent hike to the real estate tax rate would see the average Fairfax household real estate bill increase by $638 next year.

RESTON, VA — Hunter Mill Supervisor Walter Alcorn and school board member Melanie Meren will host two hall meetings to answer questions and solicit input from their constituents about the Fairfax County Fiscal Year 2026 Budget proposal.
During the Feb. 18 Fairfax County Board of Supervisors meeting, County Executive Bryan Hill presented his FY 2026 advertised budget plan, which includes:
- nearly $60 million in spending reductions
- a 1.5 cent increase in the real estate tax rate,
- a 2 percent increase in the transient occupancy tax,
- an increase of $125.3 million over last year’s transfer to Fairfax County Public Schools,
- a 2 percent cost-of-living adjustment and performance-based pay increases for county employees, and
- an additional $8.5 million in affordable housing.
If the board of supervisors votes on May 18 to adopt the 1.5-cent increase per $100 of assessed value to the real estate tax rate, the average household tax bill would increase by $638 next year.
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Related: Real Estate Tax Hike, 208 Staffing Cuts In Proposed Fairfax Co. Budget
To offset the real estate tax rate increase, Hill suggested that the county adopt a prepared food and beverage tax similar to those adopted by Arlington County, Alexandria, and Falls Church, as well as the towns of Vienna and Herndon.
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“For this coming year’s budget and beyond, I will look to the prepared food and beverage tax to relieve the burden borne by the real estate tax; fund affordable housing to get to our long-standing goal of 2 pennies by FY2027/10,000 affordable units by 2034; and fund other critical local services that cannot be funded through existing revenues and budget cuts," Alcorn said.
There are several opportunities for residents to provide feedback on the budget proposal before the supervisors and school board members vote to adopt the final version in May.
In addition, each of the supervisors will host town hall meetings in their districts to answer constituent questions and gather feedback.
Hunter Mill District Budget Town Hall Meetings
- March 12 at 7 p.m.: This in-person meeting will take place at the North County Governmental Center, 1801 Cameron Glen Drive, Reston. Additionally, this meeting will be livestreamed on Supervisor Alcorn's Facebook page.
- March 19 at 7 p.m.: This virtual meeting will take place via Microsoft Teams with this link (Meeting ID: 233 620 840 142; Passcode: TF7ou7fx). District residents can also participate by phone at 571-429-5982 (Conference ID: 851 145 145#)
For more information, questions or reasonable ADA accommodations, contact the Hunter Mill District Office at 703-478-0283.
On Feb. 20, the Fairfax County School Board adopted the FY 2026 Advertised Budget and on Tuesday, the budget committees for both boards will meet to hammer out the details of the plan.
FY 2026 Advertised Budget Schedule
- March 18: Board of Supervisors authorizes advertisement of FY 2026 tax rates and FY 2025
- April 22-24: Third Quarter Review Board of Supervisors holds Public Hearings on FY 2026 Budget, FY 2026-FY 2030 Capital Improvement Program, and FY 2025 Third Quarter Review
- May 6: Board of Supervisors marks-up FY 2026 Budget, adopts FY 2026-FY 2030 Capital Improvement Program and FY 2025 Third Quarter Review
- May 13, 2025: Board of Supervisors adopts FY 2026 Adopted Budget
- May 13: School Board holds public hearings on FY 2026 budget
- May 22: School Board adopts FY 2026 Approved Budget
- July 1: FY 2026 Budget Year Begins
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