Hungary’s budget deficit had surged to an unprecedented level by the end of March. Has Viktor Orbán’s government emptied the state coffers just days before the 2026 parliamentary election?

Budget deficit hits record high

According to the latest rapid-release figures cited by 444.hu, the cash-flow deficit reached HUF 3,420.4 billion (more than EUR 9 billion) in the first three months of the year, after a staggering HUF 1,313.6 billion (EUR 3.5 billion) hole in March alone.

That means the annual deficit target has already been 81% exhausted by the end of the first quarter, an extraordinary pace even by Hungary’s recent standards. Comparable public datasets had already shown a severe February shortfall of HUF 2,139 billion, showing how dramatically the fiscal position worsened before March’s blowout figure.

Despite the alarming numbers, the National Economy Ministry has insisted that “the budget is stable” and that financing remains fully secured for family and business support programmes.

Housing subsidies, road projects and EU-linked payouts drove March overspend

While the ministry’s detailed breakdown will only be published later, officials have already pointed to several politically significant spending lines that sharply increased in March.

Among the biggest extra costs were fresh payouts linked to the Rural Home Renovation Programme and the Home Start Programme, with the latter’s interest subsidy appearing as a budget expense for the first time. These are highly visible pre-election support measures aimed directly at households.

State investment chapters also expanded significantly, especially road development projects, while around HUF 150 billion in agricultural support for farmers was disbursed as part of EU-related expenditure reimbursements.

Taken together, the figures suggest the government accelerated cash outflows across some of the most electorally sensitive policy areas: housing, transport infrastructure and rural support.

Confusion deepens over which deficit target is even valid

One of the most striking aspects of the current fiscal story is that it is no longer entirely clear which official deficit target should be used as the benchmark.

Last year, the government substantially rewrote its key macroeconomic assumptions, including GDP growth and the deficit path, but the revised HUF 5,445 billion target was never fully codified into the budget law. At the same time, Hungary’s EDP report submitted to Brussels reportedly listed yet another figure, HUF 4,745 billion, creating three parallel reference points for analysts.

Even against that more generous EU-reported figure, the first-quarter deficit would already represent roughly 72% of the full-year goal, a pace that is still deeply concerning as Hungary remains under EU excessive deficit scrutiny. The EU Council had already warned Budapest to stay on a strict fiscal correction path through 2026.

What this means with the 2026 election just two days away

The timing could hardly be more politically significant. With Hungarians heading to the polls in just two days, the scale and composition of the spending surge are suggestive.

Critics are expected to argue that the government has loosened fiscal discipline to maximise visible support payments before election day, particularly through housing subsidies, rural programmes and infrastructure disbursements that directly affect key voter groups. Supporters, meanwhile, will frame the spending as proof that Fidesz is still willing to protect families and shield the economy from external shocks.

If Sunday’s vote delivers a close or historic result, the incoming government — whether led by Fidesz or Tisza — may inherit a budget already under enormous strain. That would make the first post-election fiscal decisions among the most consequential Hungary has faced in years.

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