Some of our ICT systems are having maintenance over the Easter bank
holiday. This may cause intermittent issues with some of our online
forms between 9am on Friday 18 April and 6pm on Sunday 20 April.
If you experience a problem with our website, please revisit
and try again later. If you have an urgent enquiry, please call us.
The council’s net budget for 2025 to 2026 is £417.2 million, with substantial investment earmarked for essential frontline council services which local residents and businesses rely on.
As a council we currently deliver around 450 services to over 380,000 residents. Waste collection, road maintenance, planning, housing, libraries, and adults’ and children’s social care are just some of the services which support the smooth running of our local communities.
It continues to be a tough financial climate for councils with inflation, higher National Insurance costs, and the ever-increasing need for social care services, particularly with our growing older population in Dorset.
The new funding arrangements set out by government in the Local Government Funding Settlement means we rely heavily on the revenue generated by council tax and retained business rates to raise the vital funds needed to deliver services to the residents of Dorset.
How Council Tax is affected
This year, the Dorset Council element of council tax is increasing by just under 5 per cent (3 per cent plus 2 per cent for the adult social care precept). This increase equates to £1.91 extra per week for a Band D property, just under the maximum the government allows councils to make.
Financial support
Help is available if you are experiencing difficulties due to the cost of living crisis