Key Points
- A larger 2026 budget was signed with an explicit promise to restore fiscal limits and predictability.
- Big expansions in school meals and senior pensions compete with quieter political add-ons and reshuffled priorities.
- Election spending and voting-machine plans are turning the budget into a test of institutional trust.
Paraguay ended 2025 by locking in its 2026 national budget, with President Santiago Peña signing the General Budget Law on December 31, after Congress approved it in early December.
The total is about ₲149.6–149.7 trillion, often converted to roughly $19.0 billion. That is about 12.3% higher than the 2025 budget, or around ₲16.4 trillion more.
Different outlets show slightly different dollar totals, largely because they use different exchange-rate assumptions. The guaraní figure is what matters for Paraguay’s accounting.
The story behind the numbers is a credibility pitch. The economic team says the 2026 plan targets the Fiscal Responsibility Law’s deficit ceiling of 1.5% of GDP.
For investors and trading partners, that is the signal: Paraguay wants to look like a rules-first country again, not a spend-now, patch-later one.

Paraguay’s $19 Billion 2026 Budgett Signals A Return To Rules-First Fiscal Policy
The headline spending bets are social. The Hambre Cero school-feeding program rises to about $370 million, aiming to reach around one million students and widen coverage in vulnerable areas.
The non-contributory pension for older adults also grows, with about $412 million planned to add 30,000 new beneficiaries and bring total coverage to roughly 370,000 seniors.
The budget also increases allocations for the presidency and for security and state capacity, including the interior ministry and police, foreign affairs, defense, education, and public health.
Those choices fit a governing theme: public order, basic services, and a stronger state presence. But Congress did more than approve. Lawmakers added about ₲435.907 billion, roughly $55.3 million, above the executive’s draft.
They cut funds for the Ministry of Public Works and Communications and shifted money toward other priorities, including social housing through the Urbanism, Housing and Habitat ministry and resources for the National University of Asunción.
Local debate also focused on controversial additions, including items linked to presidential travel. A separate fight is brewing around elections.
Congress boosted funding tied to the electoral authority’s plan to rent voting machines for the 2026 municipal vote, amid scrutiny over a single-bidder tender and earlier uncertainty about buying machines outright.
In a region where budgets can become political weapons, Paraguay is trying to prove something simpler: that growth in spending can still come with discipline, and that institutions can earn trust before election season heats up.

