45 °F Ocean City, US
April 7, 2026

Ocean City budget holds line on taxes

OCEAN CITY – Mayor Jay Gillian’s proposed budget is an $88,822,023 spending plan that increases appropriations by $1.05 million, but includes virtually no increase in taxes because of increased ratables in the resort and by using $5.4 million from the budget surplus.

Although Gillian said there is no tax increase in this budget, there actually is one, albeit miniscule. 

The new budget year has a tax rate of 47.26 cents per $100 of assessed valuation. The prior year budget has a tax rate of 47.20 cents. That makes it a 0.14 percent – just over a tenth of 1 percent – tax hike.

The local purpose tax levy actually rises by $1.022 million to $58,121,449 in the proposed budget. However, the city’s assessed valuation has jumped by $174,560,970, putting the new total at just shy of $12.3 billion.

Overall, the new budget has an additional $1.051 million in spending, offset by the same amount in revenues. The city is using $5.4 million from its surplus to offset spending, an increase of $2.250 million from the current budget.

That will still leave $5.065 million in the surplus for future use.

The city’s budget is $3.6 million under the state cap.

The proposed budget anticipates an extra $500,000 in parking meter revenue, climbing from $2.7 million to $3.2 million; $200,000 more in beach fees, up from $3.8 million; and $300,000 more in Aquatic and Fitness Center fees, up from $400,000.

The departments that require the highest funding are police and fire.

Salaries and wages for the police department are projected at $8,839,086, an increase of $352,982. Information technology wages under the police department is at $302,000 for 2022, compared to $295,000 for 2021. There also is an extra $140,000 for police vehicles, rising to $260,000 total.

There are three sections to the fire department for personnel with fire fighting wages at $7,379,000, up from $7,033,000; rescue service wages are $238,000 down from $334,000; and lifeguard wages at $1,625,000 up $30,000 from $1,595,000.

By DAVID NAHAN/Sentinel staff

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