Key takeaways from Manitoba’s budget

May Be Interested In:UK borrowing soars as business activity contracts at fastest rate for 2 years


Budget 2025 offers several measures intended to keep a few bucks in Manitobans’ pockets amid the cost-of-living crunch and a brewing U.S.-Canada trade war.

U.S. President Donald Trump’s threat of sweeping 25 per cent tariffs cast a shadow over the Manitoba government’s fiscal plan for 2025-26.

The budget includes increases to some tax credits, efforts to cut health-care wait times and measures, within the province’s control, to advance bail “reform.”

Here are 15 things to know about Budget 2025:

Tax credit hikes

The NDP government is increasing the homeowners affordability tax credit by $100 to $1,600 on school taxes in 2026, a move that will cost $5 million.

A $1,500 credit in last year’s budget replaced the school tax rebate and education property tax credit.

For renters, an income tax credit is rising to $625 from $575 in 2026, as part of efforts to eventually get it back to $700. A top-up for low-income seniors is increasing to $357 from $328.

Security rebates

Manitoba is introducing a new security equipment rebate for businesses, and bringing back a $300 rebate for homeowners and tenants, after last year’s $2 million in funding was quickly snapped up.

For residences, this year’s pool is also $2 million.

The province will offer $10 million for the business security program, after the sector lobbied for help to offset costs associated with thefts and vandalism.

More beds, grads for health care

The budget earmarks $47 million to add 97 fully-staffed beds to hospitals to reduce the strain on ERs and improve the flow of patients through the system.

The breakdown is 60 beds in acute care, 10 in critical care and 27 in transitional care. Finance Minister Adrien Sala expects all of the beds to be in use this year.

A $48.2-million plan to train more staff includes 176 new educational seats (16 for paramedics, 20 residency spots for doctors, 40 for lab and X-ray technicians and 100 for health-care aides) amid $770 million in new funding to recruit and retain front-line staff, the government said.

No more rebates for Teslas

Manitoba’s rebate for eligible electric vehicle purchases will continue, but the province is trying to discourage sales of Teslas or Chinese-made vehicles in response to U.S. and Chinese tariffs.

Tesla is run by billionaire Elon Musk, who is carrying out some of Trump’s bidding.

Manitobans can receive $2,500 on a used EV or plug-in hybrid, and $4,000 for a new EV or plug-in hybrid. The government has allocated almost $15 million for rebates this year.