Small grants. Local projects. Real money. Folkestone & Hythe’s ward-budget scheme is back for 2026/27 with a bigger pot — and community groups should be getting ready to apply. The council’s current ward-budget page says the scheme is closed until Monday 18 May 2026, but also says each of the district’s 30 councillors now has a “ward budget” of up to £5,000 to help community projects.
This isn’t the biggest line in the council’s accounts. It isn’t Otterpool, Princes Parade, Folca, or one of those municipal sagas where the paperwork needs its own sat-nav. But it matters, because this is one of the few pots of public money that can reach small local groups directly: clubs, charities, schools, community gardens, sports teams, youth projects, volunteer groups and the people who keep neighbourhood life going while everyone else is still writing a strategy.
For 2026/27, the theoretical district-wide pot is now £150,000: 30 councillors multiplied by £5,000 each. That is a significant increase from the previous £3,000-per-councillor scheme, which gave a maximum district-wide pot of £90,000.
A scheme born in 2013
The ward-budget scheme was introduced in April 2013, when the authority was still Shepway District Council. An internal audit report said the “new Ward Budget Scheme was approved and introduced in April 2013” and gave each of the then 46 district councillors a delegated annual budget of £1,000.
That first year had a twist. The audit report said a 2012/13 allocation had been carried forward, meaning each councillor had £2,000 available in 2013/14: £1,000 for 2013/14 plus the carried-forward 2012/13 amount.
The rules and amounts changed over time. By the 2016/17 period, the East Kent Audit Partnership recorded 30 councillors each with a £1,500 budget, giving a total budget of £45,000, with expenditure of £43,829. The same audit report then recorded the increase to £3,000 per councillor.
By 2023/24 and 2024/25, the formal terms and conditions said each ward member had up to £3,000 per year to spend on community projects. Those older rules also limited town and parish council applications to those with a precept of less than £21,000 a year.
The current 2026/27 terms now state that each ward member has up to £5,000 per year, and the council’s live page lists town and parish councils among those who can apply. That is an important practical change for local groups and parish areas that may previously have thought the door was closed.
What the payment data shows
We went through the uploaded master supplier-payment spreadsheet covering 2011 to 2026 and filtered rows labelled as ward budget or member ward budget payments. The spreadsheet shows no ward-budget-labelled payment rows in 2011/12 or 2012/13, which fits the audit trail saying the scheme was introduced in April 2013, although a 2012/13 allocation was later carried forward into 2013/14. Source: uploaded FHDC supplier-payment spreadsheet and extracted CSV; introduction date cross-checked against the internal audit report.
From 2013/14 to 2025/26, the uploaded payment spreadsheet contains 1,647 matched ward-budget-labelled payment rows, totalling £905,071.55. This comes from the Council’s published payment to suppliers data.


