2026 City Goals: Building a Vibrant Denver

Each year, Mayor Mike Johnston outlines a set of shared goals to guide the city’s work. Since 2023, Denver has recorded progress across all goal areas, which includes the full reopening of 16th Street, the largest multiyear reduction in unsheltered homelessness in U.S. history and a significant decline in homicides.

Building on those results, the city’s 2026 priorities include reducing gun-related shootings and homicides, expanding housing opportunities, decreasing street homelessness and increasing green infrastructure. The city also plans to expand access to child care and strengthen downtown by filling additional office and retail space. 

All of these goals bring us closer to making Denver a city that is vibrant, safe and affordable for everyone who lives here.

DELIVERING A

VIBRANT DENVER

VIBRANT
GOAL
Fill 3 million square feet of downtown office and retail space and deliver catalytic developments on time in 2026
AFFORDABLE
GOAL
Deliver 2,500 affordable units and permit an additional 5,000 total units
SAFE
GOAL
Decrease gun-related homicides by 10% citywide and reduce shootings in high-risk areas by 20%
ALL IN
MILE HIGH
GOAL
Reduce street homelessness by 75% since 2023* and address all homelessness reports within one business day
CLIMATE
RESILIENT
GOAL
Install 5,000 clean energy systems citywide and develop 50 acres of Green Infrastructure
CHILD
FRIENDLY
GOAL
Deliver a comprehensive citywide framework to expand affordable, reliable childcare, and connect 5,000 more young people to quality out-of-school programming and work opportunities

Mayor Mike Johnston presents next to a screen showing the city's 2026 goal categories: Vibrant, Safe, Affordable, All In Mile High, Climate, Child Friendly

"Our strategies are proven,” said Mayor Mike Johnston. “We will continue restoring trust between police and community, focusing intensively on areas seeing the most crime and the least joy. We will build more housing for people of all income brackets and ensure individuals experiencing homelessness receive constant and consistent support in making the leap to self-sufficiency. Along the way we’ll also add more clean energy systems, think bigger on how we support working families with childcare, and connect more young people with jobs. That’s how we’ll build a safer, vibrant, and more affordable Denver.”

 

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2025 Annual Results

Denver Goals Scorecard: 2025 Annual Results

Mayor Mike Johnston stands in front of crowd at press conference, next to orange sign and decorative icons for the new safety plan

In 2025, we focused on making Denver more vibrant, affordable and safe.

We fully reopened 16th Street and restored downtown foot traffic to pre-pandemic levels. We added or preserved more than 2,000 affordable homes and helped move 2,400 people off the streets, with 1,700 securing permanent housing -- and achieved the largest multi-year reduction in street homelessness of any U.S. city in history. Public safety improved citywide, with Denver recording its second-lowest homicide rate since 1990 and major declines in shootings and auto thefts. Voters approved the nearly $1 billion Vibrant Denver Bond to make key community investments in every neighborhood. We also secured long-term investments in Denver’s future, from keeping the Broncos in Denver to expanding parks, sports, arts and entertainment that will benefit the city for generations.

2025 Annual Results

WATCH: 2026 Goals Announcement