April 18, 2025

Florida Budget Proposals in Brief (FY 2025-26): Immigration Enforcement

This post is part of the “Florida Budget Proposals in Brief” blog series, where FPI highlights some of the key components of the House and Senate budget proposals — where they align, how they differ, and what it means for Floridians, communities, and the state economy. The difference between the House and Senate proposals is $4.4 billion, the largest difference between the chambers over the past 10 fiscal years. Consequently, policymakers will have to negotiate significant differences as they continue to agree upon a final budget. The proposals also differ from the governor’s $115.6 billion recommended budget for FY 2025-2026, with the Florida House advancing a $113 billion plan and the Senate proceeding with a $117.4 billion proposal.

The blog post below focuses on the proposed immigration enforcement budgets.

Immigration Enforcement

In prior sessions, the Legislature allocated funding for its sweeping anti-immigrant law, SB 1718. In 2025, state leaders held several special sessions on immigration, resulting in the passage of SB 2-C. Among other policies FPI opposed, including repealing Florida’s 2014 in-state tuition law, SB 2-C created a new State Board of Immigration Enforcement (SBIE) within the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE).

For FY 2025-26, both chambers propose $680,046 and five new positions[1], which matches the recurring SBIE funding that SB 2-C calls for[2]. This law also authorizes $250 million in nonrecurring funds for SBIE, totaling an appropriation of $298.8 million, yet this amount is not reflected in either chamber’s budget proposal.

 

 

Notes

[1] Line items 1188B-188G of FY 2025-26 HB 5001 and SB 2500.

[2] Section 30 of SB 2-C (2025).

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