Record $21 Billion Water Bonds Sold With Trump Budget Cuts Ahead

Water utilities are selling bonds at a record pace to upgrade aging pipes and meet tougher regulations as they prepare for a potential pullback in federal funding.

More than $21 billion of water and sewer bonds have been sold so far in 2026, the most compared to the same period since 2015, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Borrowers in New York, California and Texas have made the biggest contribution.

Utilities need to nearly triple the pace of capital improvements over the next 25 years to meet drinking water infrastructure needs, according to a March report from the American Water Works Association, which represents more than 4,300 utilities.

“You have a combination of issuers needing to replace and renew aging infrastructure, and the needs to finance new development to support growth,” Ajay Thomas, head of public finance at FHN Financial, said in an interview. The proliferation of data centers being built to power the artificial intelligence boom will spur debate on how to manage demand, he said.

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Higher regulatory demands and climate resilience needs are also “driving additional issuance,” said Sarah Sullivant, sector lead for local governments at S&P Global Ratings. She added that the risk of lower federal funding is pushing more utilities to tap the municipal bond market.

The Trump administration’s fiscal 2027 budget proposes sharp cuts to water infrastructure funding, including the clean water and drinking water state revolving funds, which provide low-cost financing to communities.

Sullivant also flagged broader drivers, like inflation driving up construction costs, which are “particularly pronounced in the water sewer sector because of the significant infrastructure backlog.”