Budget & finances
Comparing raw dollar totals between councils isn't very useful — bigger councils naturally have bigger numbers. What does tell you about a council's financial health are normalised indicators: the standard ratios that every NSW council reports against the Office of Local Government's benchmarks, plus per-property figures you can compare to the NSW average. The ratios below are from the NSW Government's 'Your Council' / OLG time-series data for 2023–24.
New to these terms? Read them in plain English
- Operating performance ratio
- Whether everyday income covers everyday running costs.
- Own-source operating revenue ratio
- How much of the council's income it raises itself vs. grants from other governments.
- Unrestricted current ratio
- Whether the council has enough spare cash to pay its short-term bills.
- Debt service cover ratio
- How comfortably operating cash covers the council's loan repayments.
- Rates & annual charges outstanding ratio
- The share of rates bills that haven't been paid by year-end.
- Cash expense cover ratio
- How many months the council could keep paying bills if income stopped.
- Infrastructure backlog ratio
- The cost of fixing run-down assets, as a share of what those assets are worth.
- Asset maintenance ratio
- Whether the council actually spends what it should on maintaining its assets.
- Building & infrastructure renewals ratio
- Whether assets are being renewed as fast as they wear out.
- Operating result (surplus / deficit)
- Income minus expenses for the year's normal operations.
- OLG benchmark
- The healthy target set by the state for each financial ratio.
- Average residential rate
- The typical yearly general-rates bill for a home in the area.
- Office of Local Government (OLG)
- The NSW body overseeing councils; publishes the financial data.
- $1,178 / yearAbout 3% above the NSW council average of ~$1,140. A separate domestic waste charge (~$544) applies. (OLG 'Your Council' data.)
- Operating surplus — performance ratio 7.2%Comfortably above the >0% benchmark.
- Liquidity & cash
- Very strong — unrestricted current ratio 4.66×, ~31.7 months cashWell above the OLG benchmarks; debt service cover 12.34× and own-source revenue 85.0% are also strong.
- Infrastructure (2023–24)
- Backlog 1.6% (passes); renewals 161.2% (passes)All three infrastructure ratios passed in 2023–24; the 2024–25 OLG figures show backlog rising to 2.3% and renewals falling to 59.9% — worth watching.
- 6.8% — above the metropolitan benchmarkThe under-5% benchmark applies because Bayside is classified Metropolitan; this is the one ratio Bayside didn't meet that year.
- Domestic waste charge (2023–24)
- $544 / yearA separate annual charge that funds the bin service.
| Indicator (2023–24) | Bayside | Meets? | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7.2% | > 0% | Yes | |
| 85.0% | > 60% | Yes | |
| 4.66× | > 1.5× | Yes | |
| 12.34× | > 2× | Yes | |
| 6.8% | < 5% | No | |
| 31.7 months | > 3 months | Yes | |
| 1.6% | < 2% | Yes | |
| 100.1% | > 100% | Yes | |
| 161.2% | > 100% | Yes |
Bayside's financial-health indicators, 2023–24, against the NSW Office of Local Government benchmarks. 'Meets?' simply states whether the figure is on the benchmark side of the line. Source: NSW Government 'Your Council' / OLG time-series data, 2023–24.
These ratios are the standard, size-independent way to read a council's finances, which is why we use them instead of raw dollar totals. Bayside met 8 of the 9 benchmarks in 2023–24; the one it didn't — rates & annual charges outstanding at 6.8% — is above the under-5% benchmark that applies to metropolitan councils (rather than the under-10% benchmark for regional/rural councils). We present the numbers and their benchmarks; whether that's good value is for you to judge from the sources below.
Sources — check it yourself
Figures are current as at the dates shown and may change — always confirm with the linked source. See the notice at the bottom of the page for full details and how to report a correction.