Kent Council Claims Solid Achievements After Ten Months in Control
Reform-led administration points to debt reduction and budget savings, though questions remain over financial sustainability.
Kent County Council’s Reform-led administration has highlighted its achievements after ten months in control, pointing to significant debt reduction and a balanced budget as evidence of competent stewardship. The council’s leader stated that the authority has reduced debt and delivered savings whilst maintaining services, claims that have been reflected in the council’s official budget documents.
The council has set its 2026/27 budget with a 3.99% council tax increase—below the maximum 5% permitted—which passed with 48 votes in favour, 26 against, and one abstention. Reform presented the package as a financial reset that protects key services whilst beginning to reduce the authority’s long-term debt burden.
Debt Reduction ClaimsThe administration’s central claim focuses on debt management. Reform inherited a council with long-term debt exceeding £730 million, which the administration claimed was costing £84,000 per day in interest charges. By the end of the 2025/26 financial year, the council states that long-term debt will have fallen by approximately £80 million, bringing total borrowing to between £600 and £650 million. Additionally, the council repaid a £50 million loan in September 2025, forty-one years ahead of schedule, delivering claimed savings of £670,000 in debt interest.
Disputed Savings FiguresHowever, the administration’s efficiency savings claims have attracted criticism. Reform issued a press release stating the council was “on course to deliver £100 million savings this year” and had “reprofiled £39.5 million of potential future spend.” Critics, including an East Kent MP, questioned whether money that was never spent could be counted as a “saving,” describing the approach as “fantasy economics.”
Underlying Financial PressuresWhilst Reform emphasises debt reduction, opposition groups and independent analysis highlight persistent structural challenges. The council’s Section 25 assurance statement—the statutory financial assessment—warns that choosing a below-maximum council tax rise creates “long-term financial risk” because income is forgone from the base. The statement goes further, cautioning that reserves are tight and that further unplanned drawdowns would pose “significant and existential risk” to the council’s medium-to-long-term sustainability.
Adult social care and special educational needs (SEND) provision remain significant pressure points. The council acknowledges more than £410 million in lifetime financial exposure from identified risks, including the ongoing SEND deficit. A temporary accounting rule currently protects the council’s balance sheet from this shortfall, but that protection expires in March 2028—just as local government reorganisation is scheduled to transfer Kent County Council’s functions to new unitary authorities.
Key Takeaways
- Kent County Council has reduced long-term debt from over £730 million to approximately £600-650 million under Reform leadership
- The 2026/27 budget passed with a 3.99% council tax rise, below the maximum permitted increase
- The council’s statutory financial assessment warns of tight reserves and significant medium-term sustainability risks
- SEND deficit and adult social care pressures remain unresolved structural challenges
What This Means for Kent Residents
The council’s budget reflects competing priorities: managing existing services whilst attempting to reduce accumulated debt. Residents will pay a below-maximum council tax increase, but ongoing questions about service sustainability and unresolved funding gaps in education and social care mean financial pressures are likely to persist.


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