2026-27 SA State Budget Update

The Malinauskas Government handed down the first budget of its second term today, following through with its big spending election commitments and cost of living relief.

In brief:

  • The Malinauskas Government has released a big‑spending budget delivering election commitments, with a cumulative operating surplus of $1.4 billion across the forward estimates.
  • Net debt is forecast to rise substantially to more than $53 billion by 2029–30, driven primarily by major infrastructure projects including the Torrens to Darlington and the new Women’s and Children’s Hospital.
  • The budget offers more than $500 million in cost of living relief and a $2.5 billion housing package, alongside major investment in health, education and skills.

$223m

Projected operating surplus

$40.27b

Projected net debt

The Government is presenting the budget as one of “no surprises and no new taxes” and by the numbers released today, that framing holds.

The operating surplus trajectory is positive, and the revenue uplift from GST, conveyance duties and payroll tax has improved the near-term position. However, the net debt trajectory is steep and sustained – rising above $53 billion by 2029-30. This will be sure to attract ongoing scrutiny.

The two major infrastructure projects, the Torrens to Darlington motorway and the new Women’s and Children’s Hospital, are the Government’s stated explanation for the debt trajectory. The question for the years ahead will be whether the revenue conditions that have helped keep the operating position in surplus continue to hold, and whether the completion of those projects does indeed allow the debt ratio to turn around as forecast.

The headline number the Government is leading with is a cumulative operating surplus of $1.4 billion across the four-year forward estimates. Year by year, the net operating balance is projected as follows:

  • 2025-26 (estimated result): $189 million
  • 2026-27 (budget): $223 million
  • 2027-28: $285 million projected
  • 2028-29: $348 million projected
  • 2029-30: $327 million projected

These are operating surpluses. Net debt, however, is a different story – and one that deserves closer attention.

Net debt rising steadily

Non-financial public sector (NFPS) net debt is forecast to increase substantially over the forward estimates.

The fact that net debt continues to climb steeply despite this revenue uplift is worth watching – it suggests the capital program is absorbing much of the windfall, and any softening of those revenue conditions could narrow the fiscal headroom quickly.

The no new taxes commitment

During the March 2026 election campaign, Premier Malinauskas pledged that his government would “not be increasing taxes and won’t be introducing new ones.” The budget makes a point of honouring that commitment with the Government explicitly ruling out the payroll tax increases on big business that were recommended by the SA Productivity Commission to fund the new Research and Development Productivity Fund. Instead, the Government says it will fund the $50 million R&D initiative through its existing budget envelope and will consult with business on the fund’s design.

Major capital projects – Women’s and Children’s Hospital and T2D

The budget continues investment in two generational infrastructure projects that are the main drivers of the state’s growing debt. The budget documents reference ongoing delivery of both the Torrens to Darlington motorway and the new Women’s and Children’s Hospital (WCH), but specific updated cost figures for each project beyond their initial estimates are not detailed in the budget or Government media releases. The Government’s line is that the debt incurred is productive infrastructure investment that will yield long-term economic returns, and that debt as a percentage of revenue will begin falling once both are completed.

Separately, the budget allocates $3 million over two years to undertake a business case for the transformation of the current WCH site in North Adelaide into a dedicated health and aged care precinct which is expected to house a mix of public and private services, as well as around 600 aged care beds once the new WCH opens.

Delivering on election commitments

The Government has framed this budget explicitly as a delivery vehicle for the commitments taken to the March 2026 election. Below are the key commitment areas.

Cost of living – more than $500 million in relief

  • Fee-free public schooling from Reception to Year 12: $174 million over four years, starting from the 2027 school year. The Government estimates this will save families an average of more than $8,000 per child.
  • $77 million over five years to provide stamp duty relief for seniors aged 60+ who downsize to a home valued up to $2 million.
  • South Australia’s first IVF rebate scheme: $18.5 million over four years, providing $2,000 per cycle for up to two cycles.
  • Try.Play.Belong children’s sports program and expanded Sports Voucher Plus scheme: $76 million over four years to reduce out-of-pocket costs for school camps and extracurricular activities, and to extend vouchers to 16 to 18-year-olds.
  • Portable Rental Bonds Scheme: $7 million over four years, allowing renters to transfer their existing bond to a new property without needing to fund a second bond upfront.
  • Seniors Card expansion: $8.4 million over four years, extending free 24/7 Adelaide Metro public transport and other discounts to all South Australians aged 60+ (and Aboriginal South Australians aged 50+) from 1 July 2026.
  • Community batteries: $15 million over two years to continue the rollout, delivering annual bill savings to approximately 10,500 low-income households.
  • Patient Assistance Transport Scheme: $16 million over four years, significantly boosting nightly accommodation subsidies for regional patients travelling for healthcare.

Housing – $2.5 billion package

Housing is the single largest spending commitment in the budget at $2.5 billion. The package includes:

  • $500 million Housing Fast-Track Fund: to purchase strategic land and accelerate it for housing development.
  • $500 million Apartment Fast-Track Fund: the Government will act as guarantor for developers to unlock CBD apartment projects.
  • Rent to Own expansion: extending the scheme to 2,000 additional homes, allowing South Australians to pay 75% of market rent for two years before purchasing, with the price locked in at the start.
  • $140 million to renovate 300 vacant Housing Trust properties and return them to stock.
  • $29.5 million Housing Skills Package: creating 1,000 new pathways into construction trades.
  • HomeStart expansion: extending low-deposit loans to police, firefighters and Technical College graduates, and opening shared equity loans to apartment buyers.
  • Housing Pattern Book: pre-approved architectural designs to fast-track planning approvals.

Education and skills – around $620 million in new investment

  • $174 million over four years for fee-free public schooling as mentioned above under cost of living.
  • $210 million over six years for redevelopment and upgrades across 37 public schools including $87 million for Mount Barker High School.
  • $150 million over four years for three new AUKUS-focused Technical Colleges in Murray Bridge (regional), Marden and Gawler.
  • $65 million over six years for student outcome programs, including STEM pathway expansion, autism inclusion rollout in all secondary schools, and a second phonics check for Year 2 students.
  • $26.8 million over five years for AUKUS skills development: supporting more than 1,000 new university and trade opportunities in relevant disciplines.
  • $25.5 million for a new TAFE SA multi-trade workshop at Mount Barker: expanding apprentice capacity in electrical, plumbing and carpentry.

Health – $1.7 billion forward estimates investment

The Government notes it has committed more than $12 billion in additional health funding since its 2022 election, and has added 678 new beds along with significant staffing increases. The 2026-27 budget allocates $1.7 billion over the forward estimates for health service delivery. Selected new investments include:

  • $250 million no-interest loan scheme to help deliver up to 650 new aged care beds: a direct response to around 380 patients currently occupying hospital beds while awaiting aged care placement.
  • $28 million over four years for a specialised mental health assessment unit at the Royal Adelaide Hospital.
  • $22 million for a new Emergency Department at Clare Hospital.
  • $13.2 million for three new 24-hour pharmacies in the west, north-east and Mount Barker.
  • $13 million to deliver a medical education and training facility adjacent to Mount Gambier Hospital, in partnership with Flinders University.
  • $10 million over four years for specialised women’s health clinics across five GP practices.
  • $4.6 million to establish SA’s first Virtual Pelvic Pain Clinic.
  • $3 million over two years for a business case for the new Greater Northern Adelaide Hospital.
  • $1.8 million for Australia’s only dedicated MND Biomarker Research Centre of Excellence, in collaboration with FightMND and Flinders University.

Whyalla and the steel industry

The budget continues the Government’s “generational investment” in Whyalla and the Upper Spencer Gulf, with funding directed at supporting the sale of the steelworks and preserving sovereign national steelmaking capacity in South Australia. Specific new expenditure figures for the Whyalla steelworks are not broken out in detail, though the Government references the Whyalla administration response as one of the unforeseen events its fiscal discipline has enabled it to absorb.

The budget formalises the South Australian Strategic Gas Reserve, a domestic gas supply agreement with Santos to supply 20 petajoules of gas per year for 10 years from 2030, aimed at underpinning the transformation of the Whyalla Steelworks and providing price certainty for South Australian industry.

Productivity, innovation and the ‘Smart State’ agenda

The budget allocates $650 million across innovation and productivity measures, with the headline initiative being the $50 million Research and Development Productivity Fund. Key points:

  • The SA Productivity Commission estimates the R&D Productivity Fund will deliver a $3.70 economic return for every $1 invested in the initiative over the next decade.
  • A Red Tape Reduction Review will be commissioned through the SA Productivity Commission, targeting regulations that are more restrictive than comparable interstate settings.
  • $50 million in 2029-30 to increase capacity in the Digital Investment Fund – taking total government digital investment to $376.5 million.
  • $15 million over two years for planning and design of transport infrastructure for the Lefevre Peninsula to support workforce growth at the Osborne naval defence precinct.
  • $2 million for establishment of the SA Gas and Water Trust.

The bottom line

For South Australian households and businesses, the budget offers meaningful cost of living measures, particularly on school fees, housing, transport and health. The challenge is that financial pressures are being felt deeply by the community, and the gap between policy announcements and felt lived experience could mean the difference between the continuing resurgence of an emboldened One Nation and four more years of unprecedented Labor political dominance.

The May SEC Newgate Mood of the Nation report paints a picture of a community that is broadly under financial strain and cautious about the future, but where the SA Government is faring reasonably well relative to its interstate counterparts.

The SA Government’s approval rating stands at 47% ‘good or better’ – steady since April and above 28% for the Federal Government. SA is performing markedly better than Victoria (19%) and on par with Queensland (47%) and WA (47%).

But will these high approval ratings be retained following the budget?

Contact us

Reach out to our Adelaide team if you would like to discuss the new South Australian Budget and what it means for you.

Sandy Biar, Associate Partner, SEC Newgate Communications – [email protected]

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