A 6.11% adjustment to water and sewage tariffs in areas served by Sabesp came into force on Thursday 1 January, marking the company’s first tariff revision since its privatisation in July 2024. The change affects 375 municipalities across the state of São Paulo and will influence bills for millions of residents.
Sabesp provides water services to around 28.1 million people and sewage collection to approximately 24.9 million, covering roughly 63% of the state’s urban population. The rate rise was announced in December 2025 by the state regulator, the Agência Reguladora de Serviços Públicos do Estado de São Paulo (Arsesp), which said the adjustment corresponds to the accumulated IPCA inflation rate over the 16 months from July 2024 to October 2025.
Sao Paulo water tariff increase explained
The regulator’s approach links tariff updates to official inflation, a mechanism intended to preserve the operator’s financial stability while maintaining service delivery. Arsesp noted that the 6.11% figure reflects the IPCA movement during the specified period rather than an arbitrary price hike. The São Paulo state government issued a statement saying the revision does not represent a real increase for consumers and follows the rules established under the new regulatory framework after the municipality-scale privatisation.
For households, a 6.11% rise will be visible on monthly statements, though the actual impact will vary according to consumption patterns and existing billing bands. Municipalities and commercial customers that rely on Sabesp’s infrastructure are also likely to see corresponding changes in their water and sewage budgets. The government’s defence of the revision highlights the balancing act regulators face between ensuring operator viability and protecting consumer interests.
Privatisation proponents argue that private management can bring efficiency gains, investment and improved service quality, while critics warn of higher costs for end users if regulation does not constrain price-setting. In this instance, the adjustment’s direct link to inflation aims to provide transparency and predictability, reducing the risk of abrupt or discretionary increases.
Investors and market watchers will monitor the effect of the new regulatory model on Sabesp’s financial performance and investment plans. The company’s ability to maintain infrastructure, expand sewage coverage and meet service targets will depend on predictable revenue streams calibrated through periodic adjustments such as this one.
Consumer groups may press for protections targeted at low-income households, including social tariffs, payment plans and efficiency programmes that reduce consumption without cutting essential access. Municipal authorities will be involved in monitoring service levels and coordinating any local mitigation measures.
Looking ahead, Arsesp will continue to apply the regulatory framework agreed after privatisation, with subsequent adjustments likely to follow predefined indices or formulas. For residents in affected municipalities, the immediate concern will be how the new rate translates into household budgets, while policymakers and regulators will assess whether the approach achieves an appropriate balance between investor returns and public affordability.
Key Takeaways:
- Sabesp implemented a 6.11% tariff adjustment for water and sewage services across 375 São Paulo municipalities, effective 1 January.
- The rise is the first since the company’s privatisation in July 2024 and is indexed to the IPCA inflation measure over a 16-month period.
- The São Paulo government and Arsesp say the update follows the new regulatory model and does not represent a real increase in consumer costs.
- The change affects roughly 28.1 million people for water and 24.9 million for sewage, and will be watched for impacts on households and municipal services.

















