FirmoGraphs keeps its clients up to date on capital plans of interest for long-term business development. We help our customers use this information to gain a competitive advantage and improve proactive conversations with their clients. We recently processed the latest capital spending plan by the North Texas Municipal Water District, Texas (NTMWD). Here are our observations.
NTMWD’s Capital Improvement Plan reflects a notable year-over-year shift in both total planned investment and project volume. The 2025 CIP totals approximately $1.73 billion across 66 projects, while the 2026 CIP declines to about $1.32 billion with 57 projects, indicating a more focused and selective capital program. Despite the overall reduction in total spending, the 2026 plan reallocates funding toward specific utility and system investments, suggesting a strategic reprioritization rather than a broad pullback. The change highlights NTMWD’s effort to concentrate resources on fewer, higher-impact infrastructure needs while maintaining long-term system reliability. NTMWD Planned Capital Spending by Business Area (2025 CIP vs. 2026 CIP).
*Numbers are Rounded
The 2026 Capital Improvement Plan is anchored by three equally large, system-critical water infrastructure projects, each valued at $50 million, underscoring NTMWD’s focus on raw water intake reliability and treated water transmission capacity.
The North Texas Municipal Water District’s Capital Improvement Plan (CIP) is developed by district staff through long-range planning efforts that assess infrastructure needs, regulatory requirements, and system growth. The proposed CIP is reviewed by NTMWD management and presented to the Board of Directors, where projects, funding strategies, and priorities are evaluated. Final approval of the capital plan and associated funding occurs through formal Board action as part of the district’s annual budget and financial planning process.
Sources: North Texas Municipal Water District : https://www.ntmwd.com/about/board-of-directors/
The North Texas Municipal Water District was established in 1951 by the Texas Legislature to provide reliable water and wastewater services to rapidly growing communities in North Texas. Initially focused on water supply from Lavon Lake, the District expanded over time to include multiple water treatment plants, reservoirs, and regional wastewater services. Today, NTMWD serves more than two million residents across numerous member cities, playing a critical role in regional water resource
FirmoGraphs curates data about U.S. public sector markets, including transportation improvement programs, regulatory developments, and other critical information. We help our customers use this information to gain a competitive advantage and improve proactive conversations with their clients. We’d be glad to meet with you and help your company sort through the wealth of information in improvement programs and other publicly available documents. Feel free to request a meeting and review the data live on our Business Intelligence platform.