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FY 23 revenues exceed expectations by 17.6%, deposit made to Rainy Day Fund

Friday, August 04, 2023

OKLAHOMA CITY – General Revenue Fund collections in June totaled $866.6 million, which is $100.5 million, or 13.1%, above the monthly estimate. This amount is $41.5 million, or 4.6%, below collections in June 2022. Total collections for fiscal year 2023 were $9 billion, which is approximately $1.6 million, or 21.2%, above the estimate, and $493.7 million, or 5.8%, above prior year collections for the same period.

"We're proud to have achieved another record-breaking year for revenue collections, enabling us to make a sizable deposit to the Constitutional Reserve Fund (Rainy Day Fund)," said State COO and OMES Executive Director John Suter. "This strong finish to FY 2023 indicates a stable foundation for our future efforts and the citizens we serve."

A constitutionally required transfer to the Rainy Day Fund of $222.9 million, meeting the constitutional limit of 15% of the prior year’s total general revenue collections, brings the Rainy Day Fund’s total to a record $1.3 billion.

For the month of June, Total Income Tax came in at 45% above estimates and 9.1% over prior year collections, while Gross Production Tax collections came in at 26.3% below estimates and 44.3% below prior year actual collections.

Revenue tables are available on the OMES website.


As state government’s main operating fund, the GRF is the key indicator of state government’s fiscal status and the predominant funding source for the annual appropriated state budget. GRF collections are revenues that remain for the appropriated state budget after rebates, refunds, other mandatory apportionments and after sales and use taxes are remitted back to municipalities. In contrast, gross collections, reported by the state treasurer, are all revenues remitted to the Oklahoma Tax Commission.


Media Contact:

Christa Helfrey | christa.helfrey@omes.ok.gov


Last Modified on Aug 30, 2023
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