This tool is not affiliated with or endorsed by the City of Lewiston or Lewiston Public Schools. Data reflects proposed figures and may change before adoption. View sources →
Revaluation Update — April 2026

The Lewiston City Council voted to delay the citywide property revaluation by one year. FY2027 tax bills will use current (pre-revaluation) assessed values — the same values used for FY2026. The revaluation notice value you may have received is for a future tax year. Learn more about what this means →

🗳️ Early voting available now

📮 School Budget Election — Vote May 12

Lewiston voters head to the polls on Tuesday, May 12 to validate the FY2027 school budget. Polls are open 7 am–8 pm at Longley School. Absentee ballot requests accepted until 4 pm on May 7 — early in-person voting is available now at the City Clerk's Office.

View election details →
Total Budget
Mil Rate
Property Tax Levy
Assessed Value
Where does the money go?
City vs school spending split
Total
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Where does the money come from?
Revenue sources — city budget
Total
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City spending
By department · FY2027 proposed
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School spending
By article · FY2027 Proposed (School Year 2026–27)
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Mil rate history
FY2027 shows the delay-adjusted estimate: the proposed budget applied to the pre-revaluation assessed base. Without the revaluation expanding the tax base, the rate rises instead of falling.
Combined mil rate — FY2023 through FY2027
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* FY2027 rate estimated from proposed budget ÷ pre-revaluation assessed value (revaluation delayed). Previously proposed rate was $19.68 (based on post-reval assessed value).

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City Budget

Fiscal year
FY2025
FY2026
FY2027

General Fund · FY2027 Proposed

City Operating Total
City Mil Rate
Per $1,000 assessed value
Local Property Tax Revenue
Raised locally
vs Prior Year
Expenditures by Department
Click any department to explore its divisions and line items.
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Expenditures by Category
Click any category to see its individual line items, then click a line item to see spending by department.
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Revenues
Click any revenue category to see its individual sources.
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School Budget

Fiscal year
FY2025
FY2026
FY2027

Lewiston Public Schools · FY2027 Proposed (School Year 2026–27)

Total School Budget
School Mil Rate
Per $1,000 assessed value
Local Property Tax Revenue
Raised locally
vs Prior Year
School Budget Referendum — Vote May 12, 2026

Lewiston voters will decide on the FY2027 school budget at a public referendum on May 12, 2026. The school budget data shown here reflects the School Committee–approved budget. Read Sun Journal coverage →

FY2026 School Budget Highlights
State Subsidy
$89,000,000
Local Funding Requirement
$34,054,176
$5.04M
Increase in Special Education
+$5,040,000
Program growth within our schools deflects millions in potential costs that would be paid if students were tutitioned out.
112%
Spike in Workers Compensation
+$892,900
A sharp increase of $892,900 has led the district actively seeking more affordable alternatives.
95%
Increase in Utilities and Power
+$742,500
Following the expiration of the previous contract, a new multi-year agreement adds $742,500 to the budget.
43%
Rise in Transportation Costs
Driven by increased student needs and a new contract following a competitive bidding process.
Expenditures by Article
Click any article to explore its programs and spending detail.
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Expenditures by School
Total spending per building. Click any school to explore its programs.
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Revenues
State subsidy, local property tax contribution, fund balance, and other sources.
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Revaluation Delayed to FY2028

The City Council voted in April 2026 to delay the revaluation one year. Your FY2027 bill uses the same pre-revaluation assessed value as FY2026, but with higher levies — so the mil rate rises. Enter your current assessed value below.

Find this on your tax bill or at the assessor's database →
Stays at $11,500 through FY2027 due to the revaluation delay. Increases to $25,000 when reval takes effect.
Your estimated tax bill
FY2026FY26FY2027FY27ChangeΔ
Assessed Value
Homestead Exemption
Taxable Value
Mil Rate
City
School
County
Total

FY2027 rate calculated from FY27 levy ÷ FY26 assessed value. Actual rate subject to Council adoption.

Think the budget should be different?

Adjust city and school spending line by line and see how it affects the mil rate and your personal tax bill in real time.

The Revaluation Has Been Delayed — Here's What That Means
  • FY2027 will use your pre-revaluation assessed value — the same value used for FY2026. The mil rate will be recalculated against the smaller pre-reval tax base, so it will be higher than the $19.68 originally projected.
  • The revaluation has been pushed to FY2028 or later. When it does take effect, new assessed values will apply.
  • This tool models a phased revaluation scenario — where new assessed values take effect gradually over 2 years starting in FY2028 (e.g. 75% recognition in FY2028, 100% in FY2029). Enter your pre- and post-revaluation values below to see how your bill might change year by year when the reval eventually applies.

The city is considering spreading the revaluation over 2 years — recognizing 75% in FY2028 and 100% in FY2029. FY2027 is delayed and uses the pre-reval assessed value base. This table lets you model what your tax bill might look like under that scenario. Note: budgets don't stay flat — each levy grows independently each year.

(Proposed) These are projections only. Mill rates depend on final assessed values, adopted budgets, and Council decisions.
FY2027FY27 FY2028FY28 FY2029FY29
Citywide AV Base
% of Revaluation Recognized Delayed % %
CITY Budget Increase % 8.7% % %
City Mill Rate
City Total Budget
SCHOOL Budget Increase % 11.0% % %
School Mill Rate
School Total Budget
COUNTY Budget Increase % 20.5% % %
County Mill Rate
County Total Budget
Composite Mill Rate
Homestead Exemption
Your Est. Tax Bill
Your assessed value
$
Enter your FY2026 assessed value — pre-revaluation
Proposed mil rate
$19.68
No changes yet
Your estimated tax bill
Total budget
Adjust any line using the slider or by typing a dollar amount. Lines marked Fixed are legally required obligations and cannot be reduced.
Your Changes
No changes yet
Adjust any line below to see your changes here.
Intellectual Property Notice: The "Build Your Budget" interactive municipal budget simulator — including its concept, design, functionality, and implementation — is original intellectual property of Sam Chamberlain and is protected under applicable copyright law. Website & code © 2026 Sam Chamberlain. Unauthorized reproduction, duplication, resale, or incorporation of this feature into any commercial or municipal software product without express written permission is strictly prohibited.
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About BudgetData.net

BudgetData.net was created by a Lewiston resident to make the city and school budgets easier to understand. Every figure comes from official public documents published by the City of Lewiston and Lewiston Public Schools. Our goal is to present that data clearly, accurately, and without editorial bias.

This tool may contain errors — all data should be verified against the primary source documents linked below. If you spot something wrong, please use the feedback button or the contact form on this page.

This tool is not affiliated with or endorsed by the City of Lewiston, Lewiston Public Schools, Androscoggin County, their affiliates, staff, or elected officials.

Get in Touch

Questions, corrections, partnership inquiries, or media requests — we'd love to hear from you.

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For the full official directory, agendas, and meeting minutes, visit lewistonmaine.gov/105/Mayor-City-Council.
City of Lewiston
FY2027 Proposed Budget
City Administrator Bryan T. Kaenrath · Published March 5, 2026
City Budget
View source
City expenditures by department and division, revenues, tax rates, and all city spending category data.
Lewiston Public Schools
FY2027 Proposed School Budget
School Committee · April 28, 2025
School budget
View source
School article expenditure totals and year-over-year comparisons. FY2025 and FY2026 shown as actuals.
FY2027 Revenue Budget
School Committee Approved · April 28, 2025
School revenue
School revenue source breakdown — state subsidy, local levy, federal grants, and fund balance draw.
Data last imported from official documents:
How it works

Use the Budget Simulator to adjust city and school spending. When you're happy with your numbers, hit 💾 Save / Share in the simulator toolbar — you'll get a link that encodes your full simulation. No account required.

Bookmark the link to return to your simulation later, or share it with anyone — they'll load your exact numbers when they open it.

Go to Simulator →
Saved budgets are stored entirely in the link — nothing is sent to a server. Your simulation is private unless you share the link.
Update: Revaluation Delayed

In April 2026, the City Council voted to delay the revaluation by one year. FY2027 bills will be based on pre-revaluation assessed values. Everything on this page about how the revaluation works remains accurate and relevant — it will apply when the revaluation takes effect in FY2028 or later.

Interactive Guide
Your assessment went up.
That doesn't mean your taxes went up the same amount.
A lot is being shared online about Lewiston's revaluation. Some of it is accurate. Some isn't. This page walks through how property taxes actually work — with real numbers from the FY2027 budget — so you can judge for yourself.
All numbers from official city and school budget documents
The one formula you need to understand

Property taxes are not calculated from assessed values alone. The formula is:

Tax Bill  =  (Taxable Value ÷ 1,000)  ×  Mil Rate
Mil Rate  =  Total Tax Levy  ÷  (Total Citywide Assessed Value ÷ 1,000)

The key insight: when citywide assessed values rise, the mil rate falls. A revaluation does not automatically raise your tax bill — it resets how the existing levy is distributed across all properties based on their current market values.

Citywide Assessed Value increase from revaluation
FY2026 → FY2027
FY2026 mil rate
mills per $1,000 of taxable value
FY2027 proposed mil rate
mills per $1,000 of taxable value
5 things being said — and what the data shows

Tap any claim to see the explanation.

This is the most common misunderstanding. Your tax bill is calculated using the mil rate — and the mil rate is set by dividing the total tax levy by the total citywide assessed value. When the revaluation roughly doubled assessed values city-wide, the mil rate was cut roughly in half.

If your value went from $150,000 to $357,000 (a 138% increase) but the citywide mil rate fell sharply — because total assessed value nearly doubled city-wide — your bill doesn't increase 138%. The rate adjusts because the same levy spreads across a much larger tax base.

Bill = (Value ÷ 1,000) × Mil Rate
FY26: ($150,000 ÷ 1,000) × 32.78 mills = $4,917
FY27 (reval-only): ($357,000 ÷ 1,000) × ~17.25 mills ≈ $6,158 — not $11,700

The rate adjusts automatically. If your property went up proportionally to the citywide average, the revaluation alone changes nothing. Bill increases come from the budget growing — not from assessed values being updated.

This is false. A revaluation does not change how much the city collects in total. When property values rise across the board, the mil rate falls to offset it — so the same levy is collected from the same total value base.

Revaluation is about fairness: redistributing an existing levy across properties at their current market values. The city collects more money only if the City Council votes to approve a larger budget.

In FY2027, both happened: the revaluation redistributed who pays what, and the Council will likely approve a larger budget. Those are two independent decisions — attributing all of the tax increase to the revaluation is inaccurate.

Assessed values aren't random — they're derived from a statistical model built on comparable sales data. The assessor analyzes actual market transactions in Lewiston and applies them to all properties based on size, age, condition, location, and type.

No mass appraisal model is perfect, and individual properties can deviate from the model. That's exactly why a formal appeals process exists. If you believe your assessed value is materially wrong, you have the right to appeal.

What the revaluation corrects: before 2027, Lewiston hadn't done a comprehensive revaluation in roughly 30 years. Properties that appreciated the most were most underassessed — meaning they had been effectively underpaying relative to market value for decades. Revaluation corrects that inequity.

These are two separate things that happened to coincide in the same fiscal year:

1. The revaluation updated property values to reflect current market conditions. By itself, this changes who pays what share of the levy — but not the total amount collected. The mil rate falls when values rise.

2. The budget increase is what actually raised the total tax levy. The City Council voted to spend more on city services and the school department. That is what causes aggregate taxes to go up.

The timing is not suspicious — revaluations have to happen periodically. Maine law requires municipalities to maintain assessment ratios, and Lewiston was long overdue. The budget is set annually. Both happened in FY2027.

Not necessarily. The variation in individual bill changes reflects how much each property was underassessed relative to its market value before the revaluation.

If your property appreciated significantly since the last revaluation, it was likely being taxed below its fair market share for years. The revaluation corrects that — and your bill reflects the catch-up. Your neighbor whose value barely changed was closer to market value before, so their adjustment is smaller.

This is by design. The goal of revaluation is fairness: each property should contribute to the levy in proportion to what it's actually worth. Properties that were paying below fair share will see a larger increase; properties closer to market value will see smaller changes.

If you believe your specific valuation is wrong, appeal it. If you think the budget itself is too high, that's a question for the City Council and School Board.

See the math: what's driving your bill change?

Enter your property values to see exactly how much of your bill change comes from the revaluation vs. the budget increase. Or follow along with example values.

Where to find your values:
Your FY2027 value will be coming by paper notice shortly. Your FY2026 value is on last year's tax bill or at the Tyler Technologies assessor portal →
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The fairness argument for revaluation

Before FY2027, Lewiston hadn't done a comprehensive revaluation in roughly 30 years. In that time, real estate markets moved dramatically — but assessed values didn't keep up. Properties that appreciated the most were paying a smaller fraction of the levy than their market value warranted. Commercial properties and lower-appreciation homes were effectively subsidizing higher-appreciation properties.

Revaluation re-levels the playing field: each property's contribution becomes proportional to what it's actually worth today. If your bill went up a lot, your property likely appreciated more than the citywide average. If it went up a little, your property was already closer to market value.

The budget is a separate conversation. You can oppose the spending increase and support the revaluation, or vice versa. They are independent policy questions decided by different processes.

See all four scenarios side-by-side

The Tax Bill guide walks through FY2026 baseline, budget-only, reval-only, and actual FY2027 with a full rate and dollar breakdown.

Explore the full city & school budgets

See exactly where your tax dollars go — department by department. Adjust spending in the simulator to see what it would take to lower the mil rate.