Buffalo's Fiscal
Health: Decoded
A city that can't pay its bills can't invest in its future. Strong Towns calls this the solvency principle. Buffalo spent a decade under state fiscal control, looked like it had recovered, and is now facing a fiscal cliff in 2026 as federal aid runs out and legacy costs keep climbing. The charts below show what the numbers actually say.
Data: 2002–2025 via Buffalo Annual Comprehensive Financial Reports
The Finance Decoder & #DoTheMath
Strong Towns Buffalo's #DoTheMath initiative uses the Finance Decoder to chart 20+ years of city financial data. We're not prescribing specific fixes here. The goal is to give everyday Buffalonians the context to ask sharper questions of their elected officials. Every budget, project, and policy should be able to answer these three:
Transparent local accounting would let Buffalo invest in transit, housing, and parks on a predictable schedule. Instead, for decades the city has balanced its books with money that was never going to last. Economists call this temporal discounting: treating tomorrow's obligations as less real than today's. State aid bumps, reserve drawdowns, and federal pandemic relief (ARPA) have each taken a turn plugging the gap. It is a pattern almost as old as the post-World War II suburban expansion that hollowed out Buffalo's tax base, and the warning signs keep coming: most recently, S&P revised Buffalo's outlook to Negative in 2021 and again in September 2025.
How did we get here?
Strong Towns founder Charles Marohn argues cities go broke for one reason: they build places that cost more to maintain than they'll ever produce in revenue. Buffalo is a textbook case. A city built for 580,000 people in 1950 now serves roughly 278,000, yet still maintains the same network of roads, water mains, sewers, and public buildings. By 2003, things were bad enough that New York State imposed "hard control" through the Buffalo Fiscal Stability Authority (BFSA), which controlled the city's finances under "hard" authority until 2012 and continues to provide oversight today in an advisory role.
The Numbers at a Glance
Four numbers every Buffalo resident should know, pulled directly from the city's 2025 Annual Comprehensive Financial Report (ACFR).
The charts below break it down, grouped by those three questions.
Sustainability Can Buffalo keep this up long-term?
The Bottom Line: How Deep in the Hole Is Buffalo? [Net Financial Position]
3 more sustainability charts ▼
How Many Years Would It Take to Pay Off the Debt? [Net Debt-to-Total Revenues]
Could the City Cover Its Bills Tomorrow? [Financial Assets-to-Total Liabilities]
If Buffalo Sold Everything, Could It Pay What It Owes? [Assets-to-Liabilities]
Flexibility How much room does Buffalo have to adapt?
How Fast Is Buffalo's Infrastructure Wearing Out? [Net Book Value-to-Cost of Tangible Capital Assets]
How Much Revenue Goes Straight to Interest Payments? [Interest-to-Total Revenues]
Vulnerability How dependent is Buffalo on outside help?
How Much Money Comes from State and Federal Government? [Government Transfers-to-Total Revenue]
Buffalo's recovery is real.
Its balance sheet isn't fixed.
There are real signs of progress in Buffalo: new investment, rising property values, and growing revenue. But the numbers above show a city still carrying $1.2 billion in unfunded retiree healthcare, infrastructure that has lost half its recorded useful life, and growing reliance on revenue sources it does not control. With federal pandemic relief having run its course and S&P flagging a Negative outlook, the question is whether Buffalo can build a budget on money it can count on every year.
Every Buffalonian deserves the context to hold their leaders accountable. Send these charts to your Common Council member and ask:
Tell them you want a budget built on Strong Towns principles: maintain what we have, grow in ways that pay for themselves, and stop budgeting for today at tomorrow's expense.
Hungry for more?
See what the city publishes, dig into the numbers behind this page, or learn more about Strong Towns principles.