15% increase to council tax proposed for Orkney

15% increase to council tax proposed for Orkney

Councillors in Orkney have proposed to increase Council Tax by 15% to protect services in the future in line with their agreed medium-term financial strategy.

Elected members recommended the increase at yesterday’s meeting of the Policy and Resources Committee. The change will bring the cost for a Band D property to £1574.60 per year, bringing Orkney’s Council Tax rate closer to the national average.

Members were presented with four options at the meeting.

These options were built around previous council decisions and the clear feedback received from the council’s Budget Challenge survey which ran between December 2024 and January 2025 when the public said they were willing to pay higher levels of Council Tax in order to protect council services.

47% of those surveyed said they’d be willing to pay increases of either 15% or 20% to protect services in the future - with 40% expressing preference for a 10% increase.

The survey found significant opposition to five of the savings proposals that had been put forward, namely:

  • Charging for extra-curricular trips at Papdale Halls of Residence
  • Charging for placing requests at Papdale Halls of Residence
  • Closing the Dounby recycling centre
  • No longer emptying civic amenity site skips on a Saturday morning
  • No longer providing free black bags in the isles

Based on this feedback, elected members opted to protect these services and – following a vote of 11 to 10 – to increase Council Tax by 15%, protecting services in the future and bringing Council Tax rates closer to the Scottish average, in line with their agreed medium term financial strategy.

Councillor Heather Woodbridge, leader of Orkney Islands Council, said: “The options which were brought forward to us today had incorporated the feedback we received from the public in our recent budget survey – in which our community told us not only about the services they most valued but that they were willing to pay more to protect those services.

“It was clear from the responses that were received how important Council services are locally – and our approach to our budget setting reflects that.”

That recommendation will now be going to Full Council on 4 March.

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