---
title: "Spartanburg County Council Holds Second FY2027 Budget Workshop"
url: https://www.herespartanburg.com/spartanburg-county-council-budget-workshop-fy2027/
date: 2026-05-15T08:33:39-04:00
modified: 2026-05-15T08:33:40-04:00
author: "A. Nadine Hagood"
categories: ["Politics"]
site: "HERESpartanburg"
attribution: "HERESpartanburg"
---

# Spartanburg County Council Holds Second FY2027 Budget Workshop

*Source: [HERESpartanburg](https://www.herespartanburg.com/spartanburg-county-council-budget-workshop-fy2027/) — May 15, 2026 by A. Nadine Hagood*

[Spartanburg County](/) Council convened a special Budget Workshop on Thursday, May 14, at 2 p.m. in County Council Chambers at 366 North Church Street — the second in a planned series of pre-budget working sessions as the county moves toward formal adoption of its FY2027 fiscal year spending plan.

The session was posted to the county’s official online agenda center on May 13, confirming the workshop’s position in the budget calendar. County council meetings in 2026 have generally followed a third-Monday schedule, with full council sessions occurring on dates including January 26, February 16, March 16, and April 20. The May 14 workshop was a special session called outside that regular rhythm to maintain momentum on budget preparation ahead of the formal adoption process.

Budget workshops at the county level give council members and department heads the opportunity to review line-item expenditure proposals, hear from division directors, and raise questions before a formal budget ordinance is introduced for public readings and a final vote. Spartanburg County’s fiscal year runs from July 1 through June 30, giving the county roughly six weeks from mid-May to finalize its plan.

Spartanburg County is Upstate South Carolina’s most economically active county, with the largest industrial tax base in the region. [BMW Manufacturing](/business/?employer=bmw), [Michelin North America](/business/?employer=michelin), Milliken and Company, and the rapidly expanding distribution and data infrastructure sector all generate significant property and business license tax revenue for the county. The budget process includes allocations for public safety — the county’s largest single expense — along with road maintenance, parks and recreation, animal welfare, the new Pet Resource Center on Southport Road, and capital infrastructure tied to the joint city-county government complex under construction on South Church Street.

The FY2027 budget cycle follows a year in which Spartanburg County attracted $3.5 billion in new capital investment and created more than 1,024 jobs, according to [OneSpartanburg](/business/?org=onespartanburg), Inc.’s annual report. That level of investment typically flows into increased assessed property values over a multi-year lag, but also creates near-term demands on county services — roads, utilities, emergency response, and planning staff — that the budget must accommodate.

The next full County Council meeting is scheduled for Monday, May 18, at the same chamber at 366 North Church Street. That session will carry forward any items emerging from the May 14 workshop and is open to public attendance and comment.
