
TL;DR Summary: Loving County, Texas—the least populated county in the United States—is proposing a 2026 budget fueled by a 12% property tax levy increase, generating over $94 million from a staggering $19.8 billion tax base. While officials are freezing their salaries for the upcoming year, they are locking in massive six-figure incomes in a jurisdiction with fewer than 100 residents. It’s a glaring reminder that local governments wield immense financial power, and without vigilant citizens to hold them accountable, unchecked bureaucracy and quiet tax hikes thrive in the shadows.
We used to look at the numbers. We used to go to town halls, read the public notices, and demand that the people spending our money could justify every single dime. Today, the American electorate is hyper-fixated on the political theater in Washington D.C., while the real money, the real power, and the real impact on our daily lives are quietly managed in sterile county courthouses while nobody is watching.
If you want to understand the state of American civic engagement, you don’t need to look at Congress; you need to look at Loving County, Texas.
With a population that could comfortably fit inside a single school bus, Loving County is proposing a budget and tax levy that rivals mid-sized American cities. Because of the region’s massive oil and gas wealth, the county is sitting on billions in taxable value. The documents published by their local government tell a story of staggering revenue, bloated administrative compensation, and a tax base operating entirely disconnected from the realities of its population size. This isn’t just a Texas anomaly; it is a magnifying glass on the American local government system and a warning about what happens when public officials operate without public scrutiny.
Here are the vital facts from Loving County’s latest filings, and what they really mean:
• The 12% Tax Hike Hidden in Plain Sight
• The Fact: The proposed tax rate is $0.47486 per $100 valuation. While this technically does not exceed the voter-approval rate, it does exceed the no-new-revenue rate. The result? The total tax levy on all properties will jump from roughly $84 million to over $94.1 million—an increase of $10,131,968.14, or 12.06%.
• Source: 2026 Tax Rate Public Hearing Notice
• The Commentary: This is the classic municipal sleight of hand. Governments routinely ride the wave of massive property valuation spikes to quietly pocket millions more in revenue, pointing out that the rate itself didn’t jump drastically. It is a backdoor tax increase.
• The $19.8 Billion Tax Base for Less Than 100 People
• The Fact: The county possesses a certified taxable value of over $19.8 billion. To fund the 2026 budget, this colossal wealth is being tapped to generate tens of millions of dollars in unencumbered balances, including an estimated $87.7 million sitting in the General Fund alone.
• Sources: 2025 Tax Rate Calculation Worksheets and 2026 Proposed Budget
• The Commentary: Public money should serve the public trust, not sit in massive governmental slush funds. When wealth is this concentrated in a jurisdiction this small, the potential for mismanagement or unchecked spending skyrockets unless there is rigorous, independent oversight.
• Six-Figure Salaries for Micro-Governance
• The Fact: The county boasts that no pay increases are proposed for the upcoming year. However, the baseline salaries are already jaw-dropping: the County Judge, Treasurer, District/County Clerk, County Attorney, County Auditor, and both Justices of the Peace will each maintain a set salary of $126,256.63. Precinct Commissioners will make over $64,000, and the Sheriff will make over $63,000.
• Source: 2026 Elected Officials Salary Notice
• The Commentary: In a county with roughly 60 residents, paying half a dozen officials over $125,000 a year is a masterclass in bureaucratic self-enrichment. The ratio of highly paid government employees to private citizens is completely inverted.
The Broader Implication for the American Citizen
Why should a voter in Ohio, Pennsylvania, or Oregon care about a micro-county in West Texas? Because the mechanics of apathy are exactly the same everywhere.
Loving County officials are legally required to post these PDFs, schedule a public hearing (set for August 25, 2025), and put their names on the record. But transparency means nothing if no one is looking through the window. If a tiny county can quietly pull in $94 million a year and pay its part-time officials $126,000 while boasting about a “frozen” salary, imagine what is buried in the hundreds of pages of your own city or county budget.
Are your local officials using rising property values to mask 12% revenue hikes? Are the administrative salaries in your town completely out of step with the median income of the people who live there?
We get the government we demand, and right now, we aren’t demanding much. The cure for a bloated, inefficient, or self-serving government isn’t a new national slogan; it’s a citizen sitting in the third row of a municipal building on a Tuesday night, holding a printed PDF, and asking the mayor to explain the math. Democracy is a participatory sport, and it’s time to get off the bench.