CANADA STRONG BUDGET 2025

Building Canada Strong. Spending less to invest more.

The Honourable François-Philippe Champagne, November November 2025

"The world is in a 'generational shift', not a transition. Canada's response must be 'active, ambitious nation-building'. The plan is to 'spend less so we can invest more' by cutting operational spending to fund 'generational investments' in growth, housing, and defence, all while being grounded in 'fiscal responsibility'."

Fiscal Snapshot

Projected Deficit (2025-26)

$78.3 Billion

(2.5% of GDP)

Federal Debt-to-GDP (2025-26)

42.4%

Projected to remain stable

Projected Deficit (Billions)

YearDeficit ($B)% of GDP
2025-26

$78.3

2.5%
2026-27

$65.4

2.0%
2027-28

$63.5

1.9%
2028-29

$57.9

1.6%
2029-30

$56.6

1.5%

Projected Federal Debt (% of GDP)

YearDebt-to-GDP
2025-26

42.4%

2026-27

43.1%

2027-28

43.3%

2028-29

43.3%

2029-30

43.1%

Key Fiscal Anchors

Generational Investments (5-Year Plan)

Source: PDF Page 28

Total: $280 Billion

41%

$115B

Infrastructure

39%

$110B

Productivity & Competitiveness

11%

$30B

Defence & Security

9%

$25B

Housing

Analysis: The $60 Billion 'Comprehensive Expenditure Review'

This is the "Spend Less" part of the plan. The government is cutting existing programs to fund new priorities.

Total Savings (5 Years)

$60 Billion

Source: PDF Page 215

Annual Savings by 2028-29

$13 Billion

Source: PDF Page 215

Workforce Reduction

~40,000 Positions

Estimated decline of about 40,000 positions (10%) from 2023-24 peak, facilitated by a new Early Retirement Incentive (ERI) program.

Source: PDF Page 222

Key Program Cuts & Recalibrations

  1. 2 Billion Trees Program

    Program will be wound down; uncommitted funds will be returned.

    Source: PDF Page 220
  2. Net Zero Accelerator

    Program will be wound down due to 'declining demand'.

    Source: PDF Page 219
  3. International Development Assistance

    Recalibrated to return to a 'pre-pandemic level'.

    Source: PDF Page 219
  4. Medical Cannabis Benefits (VAC/RCMP)

    Adjusted to align reimbursement rate 'closer to the market price'.

    Source: PDF Page 219
  5. DND Fleet Divestment

    Retiring selected fleets 'nearing end of service life' to save on 'costly repairs and sustainment costs'.

    Source: PDF Page 220

Summary of Key Tax Measures

Middle-Class Tax Cut

Lowering the first marginal personal income tax rate from 15% to 14%.

Cancel Consumer Carbon Price

Permanently cancelled the federal fuel charge.

GST Rebate for First-Time Home Buyers

Eliminating the GST on new homes up to $1 million for first-time buyers.

Personal Support Workers Tax Credit

A temporary refundable tax credit of up to $1,100 per year.

Key Initiatives by Chapter

Building a Stronger Canadian Economy

Net Impact: +$13,339M
Source: PDF Page 133

Major Projects Office

Launching the MPO as a 'single point of contact' to fast-track nation-building projects by streamlining reviews and approvals.

Productivity Super-Deduction

A new set of enhanced tax incentives to allow businesses to write off a larger share of new capital investments immediately.

SR&ED Enhancement

Increasing the annual expenditure limit for the enhanced 35% tax credit from $4.5 million to $6 million.

Sovereign AI Infrastructure

$925.6 million over five years to support a large-scale sovereign public AI infrastructure.

Build Communities Strong Fund

$51.0 billion over 10 years for a new fund to support community and regional infrastructure projects.

Analyst's Summary: What This Budget Means for You

This budget represents a major pivot. Here’s what it means in simple terms.

The Analyst's Take: The Big Gamble

This budget is a massive pivot. It's a gamble that cutting taxes and existing programs to fund a new 'Fortress Canada' industrial and military strategy will create more prosperity and security in the long run. The government is trading 'business as usual' for a state-led plan to 'rebuild, rearm, and reinvest'.