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City of Cape Town hid its budget details in 39 annexures

Trump 1.0 policy adviser Steve Bannon describes the tactic as flooding the zone. In the compressed week before an Easter holiday, the City of Cape Town released its draft budget with 12 annexures just for the water and sanitation part.

Lerato-CPTWasteWater-Crisis Mayor of Cape Town Geordin Hill-Lewis at Strand Beach, Cape Town. (Photo: Gallo Images / ER Lombard)

Digesting 39 budget detail annexures is almost impossible without AI assistance. But we have to try, or we may miss something.

“In this budget, we have managed to keep increases to water, sanitation, refuse collection and city cleaning to a minimum,” explained City of Cape Town mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis in his address to council. Hill-Lewis is in the final stretch of his current administration and is adjusting the “the city works for you” narrative to become the City of Hope.

From a literary perspective, it’s a nice play on the Cape of Good Hope characterisation carried over from the early years of global exploration and empirical expansion. This was the cape of refuge from the fierce storms and rough seas en route to the riches of Asia.

The valuation illusion

For ratepayers navigating the 2026/27 financial year, the R87.79-billion draft budget tabled on 31 March presents its own rough seas. While the mayor proclaims a record-breaking R40-billion three-year infrastructure investment and claims the “most comprehensive relief for struggling households,” the data tell a more complex story of shifting tax burdens and looming hikes.

The headline is a 10.2% drop in the residential rate-in-the-rand formula, lowering it to 0.006428, with a special condition that the first R500,000 of a property’s value will be rates-free.

That allows the City to crow that around 60% of homes will see a decrease in property rates, or no change at all.

The uncomfortable reality hidden in the annexures is that the 2025 general valuation wipes out much of this perceived relief.

As property values have swollen, the total revenue the City extracts from property rates is actually projected to climb by 7%, yielding an additional R963.5-million for the 2026/27 financial year.

Because the fixed water basic charges are strictly tied to property value bands, many homeowners will be punted into higher fixed-cost brackets simply because their assessed property value went up.

City-wide cleaning’s dirty secret

The mayor’s speech also proudly declares that the new city-wide cleaning tariff will increase by only 3.75%. Digging into the medium-term projections reveals that the citizens are following the mayoral tune towards a cliff:

This tariff is being phased in for 2026/27 with a modest increase. In 2027/28, it is slated for a massive 16.96% hike. By 2028/29, ratepayers will be slammed with an enormous 37.31% increase.

The budget also resurrects the ghosts of the Day Zero 2018 water crisis. Back then, a proposed property-value-based drought charge was scrapped after 66,000 furious public comments.

Instead, the City has now baked the costs into fixed basic water and sanitation charges that ignore actual consumption.

In the 2026 redux, the controversial desalination plants are back on the books permanently – not as emergency levers that were never pulled, but rather as integral additional infrastructure. Budget allocation shows a beefy R292.9-million for Desalination Location 2 (there by Paarden Eiland by all indications) and explicitly notes that future operational costs will be absorbed directly into the water tariff.

Snapshot of the proposed tariff increases in the 2026/2027 draft budget. (Source: City of Cape Town)

The electricity conundrum

On the energy front, the City (and the DA, by political extension) boasts of restricting the Nersa-approved 9.01% Eskom hike down to an average 6.67% increase for its customers.

However, the electricity tariff acts as a Trojan horse for other municipal costs. There’s an unregulated component of the tariff that charges consumers an extra 11.45c per kWh just to fund street lighting. On top of that, a 29.65c per kWh contribution to rates is quietly skimmed from most non-residential energy sales (more on that below).

Direct customers classified as home users (properties valued above R1-million) are hit particularly hard, facing a fixed service charge of R368.96 per month before a single lightbulb is switched on.

The cost of doing business in the City of Hope

While the residential sector wrestles with valuations and tariffs, the commercial and industrial sectors carry a disproportionately heavy load in Cape Town.

Industrial property rates are taxed at a 1:2.35 ratio
compared with residential homes. While residential properties pay a rate-in-the-rand of 0.006428, industrial sites sit with 0.015106.

The City is aggressively passing on cost recovery tariffs for disaster management directly to heavy industry – these are green taxes by another name. For 2026/27, Astron Energy will pay an annual tariff of more than R610,000, Rheinmetall Denel Munitions pays roughly R693,063 and Koeberg faces a massive R14.46-million bill.

Industrial waste water is also heavily penalised, carrying a base treatment cost of R5.04 per kilolitre multiplied by a surcharge factor based on the concentration of pollutants.

These costs are also on top of conditions where commercial water tariffs offer no free allocations, starting at R39.56 per kilolitre and ramping up to R68.76 if the City enters emergency water restrictions.

To be fair, the budget does widen the safety net for the city’s poorest residents, shielding them from the brunt of these hikes:

  • Registered indigent households will receive their first 10.5 kilolitres of water free. These vulnerable households are also entirely exempt from the fixed basic water and sanitation property charges.
  • The upper qualifying limit for pensioners and social grant recipients to receive rates rebates has been raised to a total monthly household income of R27,000.
  • Homeless shelters and children’s homes get a free allocation of 0.75kl of water per person per month.

If anything, there is nothing obviously nefarious about the proposed budget. Hill-Lewis has a very talented speech writer who stretched the reality of the economic turmoil very thin with hopeful language.

The budget compilers also deserve a special mention for obfuscating the devilish details across a brutal number of annexures. DM

Comments

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brucedanckwerts 7 April 2026 06:30 AM

At least you got a budget - after 50 years I have never seen a budget for Choma (recently upgraded to a City) Council. More important would be to get monthly figures of Income and Expenditure. It would not be too burdensome for the City (and for the Internet) to publish these figures in .csv format as the City should be collecting that information anyway. Only then can burgers check whether the money being spent on some project or repair looks to be fair value. Bruce Danckwerts, CHOMA

Martin Neethling 7 April 2026 06:34 AM

Hill-Lewis and his administration deserve credit for the demonstrably better job they do than the ANC . But he is, ideologically, a tax-and-spend politician, and is particularly focused on taxing ‘the rich’, code for suburban residents whose property values have risen ahead of inflation. This is coupled with prioritising social spend, hidden in ‘infrastructure’ items. It’s a losing strategy. His funding constituency is slowly souring, and social spend beneficiaries don’t vote DA.

Mike 7 April 2026 08:02 AM

I'd love to see DM doing a similar critique of other metro's budgets ... but dololo ...

Michele Rivarola 7 April 2026 09:00 AM

Lindsey in your haste you miss fundamental points. CoCT balances its budgets unlike the rest of the metros that simply run deficits in the hope of bail outs. The biggest beneficiaries are those in need of infrastructure unlike in the other metros where the biggest losers are those in need of infrastructure. Those who own multimillion rand properties are happy for the value of their properties to increase but unhappy to pay for what it takes to achieve it, go figure.

D'Esprit 7 April 2026 10:52 AM

Having criticised the DA throughout the article, the writer finishes off by saying that there's actually nothing wrong with the budget except that he had to do a bit of work to read the annexures? That's a bit pathetic, don't you think?

m***0@g***.com 7 April 2026 01:01 PM

The money has to come from somewhere. This hope that costs will remain the same, under our huge influx of poor people with their expanded demands, is illogical. The top heavy ANC government won't pay. So SA cities are left to become financially self-dependant. That is really hard on all of us. The poor must be supported. That is an inescapable given. At least with the DA we are more assured that our hard-earned money is going where it should, and not getting lost in skelem pockets.

mike muller 7 April 2026 01:44 PM

The commenters have missed the point. Cape Town is getting too expensive for its residents to live there as Helen Zille warned some years ago: South Africans would not be able to afford the Atlantic seaboard she said. The city's determination to attract tourists has seen AirBnB chase more people out. But even with all that high-value foreign income, property values are rising and the rates with them. Still, if you can't afford Cape Town, you can always move back to Jozi!

Carl 7 April 2026 02:39 PM

These increases of theirs are snowballing out of control for us. Recently our combined rates and utilities bill went up by over 30% when they introduced the new fixed pricing structure based on property values. Now they are increasing all those various new fixed charges and over and above that they have increased our property value by 17%, so all these additional fixed charges will now cost us even more. We will find some other party to vote for

Hans Rehder 7 April 2026 04:13 PM

Mr Schutters, you will starts a revolution of burghers driving SUVs (for the most part)! :D One almost gets the impression that H-L is not particularly concerned with re-election as mayor, but rather anticipating a higher office and leaving the devils of the details to be unleashed on a successor. Kudos to you for rifling through said annexures. At face value the budget could well have been penned by Hero-Lewis.