The Michael J. Franco Team

How Mamdani Wants to Close New York City’s Budget Deficit

New York City is facing a projected $5.4 billion budget deficit, and the question on many residents’ minds is simple: how does Mayor Mamdani intend to close that gap?

The short answer is that he has signaled a willingness to raise taxes, particularly on high earners, to preserve city services and avoid deep cuts. The details, and the political realities behind them, are far more complex—and they matter a great deal for anyone who lives, owns, or rents in the city.

The Original Idea: Raise Income Taxes on High Earners

Mamdani’s first, headline‑grabbing proposal focused on the city’s highest earners.

The plan:

This approach is being framed as “fair” and “targeted”—impacting only the top of the income spectrum, while protecting services that benefit the broader population. On paper, it is an elegant solution: tap the wealthiest residents to close the gap and preserve programs such as universal childcare and free buses.

There is one major problem: the city cannot do this on its own.

The Albany Reality: Who Actually Controls Income Tax Rates

New York City does not have unilateral authority to rewrite its income tax structure. Any significant adjustment to personal income tax brackets or surcharges must go through Albany, meaning:

Governor Hochul has been publicly resistant to raising income taxes on high earners, especially heading into an election cycle. Even if the mayor were able to persuade a critical mass of state legislators to support the increase, the governor’s veto power remains a meaningful barrier.

In practical terms, this means the millionaire tax proposal is as much a political signal as it is a concrete policy path. It reflects priorities and values, but it is unlikely to become law in its current form.

The Pivot: A 9.5% Citywide Property Tax Increase

Because the city’s ability to raise income taxes is constrained by state control, Mamdani has turned to one of the few levers City Hall can pull more independently: property taxes.

His latest proposal:

Mamdani positions this as a fallback option if the state refuses to adopt higher taxes on high‑income individuals and corporations. In practice, however, it is the lever that is actually within reach.

Why Property Taxes Get Everyone’s Attention

In real estate, even the suggestion of higher carrying costs gets people’s attention. Property taxes are not just another line on a spreadsheet; they influence:

And it is not just homeowners who are affected.

There is no neat, isolated pocket of the market that absorbs a property tax increase alone. The effects ripple outward, touching many of the very people the policy is ostensibly designed to protect.

Who Really Feels a Property Tax Hike?

New York’s property tax system is famously complex—and widely regarded as inequitable. Because of how assessments and classifications work, tax increases are not felt evenly.

Critics of Mamdani’s proposal argue that:

This stands in tension with the mayor’s stated goal of “taxing the rich” and making New York more affordable for everyone else. A broad‑based property tax hike does not surgically target only the top of the market. It touches a wide range of owners and, indirectly, renters and small businesses.

Political Pushback and the Odds of Passage

Unsurprisingly, the proposal has drawn significant pushback.

Comprehensive reform could, in theory, make the system more equitable over time. But it is not something that can be designed, negotiated, and implemented in a single budget cycle—or even a single year.

In the near term, a large, across‑the‑board tax hike remains a difficult sell.

Is This Policy—or Negotiating Leverage?

Property taxes are politically sensitive precisely because they are broad‑based and visible. They do not quietly adjust behind the scenes. Bills arrive in the mail. Escrow accounts are recalculated. Rent renewals reflect higher costs.

That visibility cuts both ways:

For those reasons, it is reasonable to view the property tax proposal not only as a concrete option, but also as negotiating leverage in a broader conversation. It creates pressure to:

As in any negotiation, the eventual outcome is likely to involve some give and some take: adjustments to spending, a mix of smaller revenue measures, and possibly more modest changes to specific tax categories.

What This Means for New Yorkers Right Now

For homeowners, investors, and renters, a few practical points are worth keeping in mind:

If you are considering a purchase or sale in this environment, it is important to look beyond the headlines and understand how potential changes could (or could not) impact your specific building, tax class, and price point.

If you would like to talk through how these proposals might intersect with your real estate plans—or what scenarios are most realistic based on current politics and market data—I am always happy to discuss it. In a city like New York, tax policy, market psychology, and real estate are more connected than they might appear.

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