By SUZANNE DOWNING
My 19, 2026 – After political brinkmanship and a Legislature deeply divided over just about everything, including the amount of the Permanent Fund dividend, Alaska lawmakers forged a compromise operating budget over the weekend that gives most Alaskans a combined $1,200 payment.
The $13.9 billion fiscal year 2026 operating budget was finalized by a House-Senate conference committee in a 4-2 vote on Sunday morning, with Senate Minority Leader Mike Cronk and Rep. Will Stapp voting against the deal.
The compromise settles one of the biggest fights of every recent legislative session, at least temporarily, by setting the Permanent Fund dividend at $1,000 and adding a separate $200 energy relief payment for eligible Alaskans.
The final agreement lands roughly in the middle between the Senate’s more restrained spending plan and the House’s earlier push for a significantly larger dividend of about $1,500.
The compromise budget reflects the increasingly narrow path lawmakers had available this year. Oil revenue forecasts remain volatile, inflation continues to pressure state agencies and school districts, and the Legislature has simultaneously been pushing for education funding increases, public employee pension proposals, and the politically explosive Alaska LNG legislation, which got bogged down in the House on Monday.
For months, the PFD debate once again exposed the philosophical divide in Juneau between lawmakers who prioritize larger direct payments to Alaskans and those arguing for bigger government.
The addition of a standalone energy rebate appears designed to soften the political blow of the lower dividend amount. The statutory amount, which is the amount set by Alaska law in a formula established decades ago, would be over $3,800 this year.




2 thoughts on “Alaskans’ Permanent Fund dividend now set at $1,200 for 2026”
I must quibble with the characterization of the Senate’s spending plan as “more restrained”. In recent history, the Senate reduces spending in some areas only for the purpose of having more money to BLOW AND WASTE on political pork projects that do Alaskans no good. Alaskans should ask themselves: When did they see a Legislative pork project or grant provide any benefit to anyone that they know? Fact is that the beneficiaries of these appropriations – running into the billions over the years – are an extremely small group of people. Our Legislature, like those in many other states, is an embarrassment to democracy.
We will know we are healing as a state when these criminals are facing indictments and prison.
Just in the last five years they have stolen north of $30,000 of our dividend from my family. Grand larceny is a felony.
And we tolerate it. Why are we so weak that we allow ourselves to be preyed upon?