State and territory leaders are furious over Treasurer Joe Hockey's plans to strip more than $80 billion in federal cash from health, education, and national partnership budgets over the next 10 years.

The cuts will begin to bite in July, just four months before Victoria's state election, and with the Coalition governments in Queensland and New South Wales due to go to the polls in the first half of 2015.

Here's how some of the cuts will begin to take effect.

Cuts for concession card holders

Saves $1.3 billion over four years from July 1 2014

Axing the National Partnership Agreement on certain concessions for pensioners concession card and seniors card holders will affect discounts on rates, water, sewerage and power bills, car rego and public transport discounts.

Cuts to public hospitals

Saves $1.8 billion over four years from 2014-15

Ceases funding guarantees under the National Health Reform agreement 2011 and changes the indexation of hospital funding from 2017 by combining CPI with population growth.

Cuts to public hospital services

Saves $201 million over three years from 2015-16

Axes the National Partnership Agreement on Improving Public Hospitals Services and ceases reward funding for states that meet targets on measures like elective surgery waiting lists.

Cuts to preventive health

Saves $367.9 million over 4 years from 2014-15

Axing the National Partnership Agreement on Preventive Health which paid for programs to encourage healthier lifestyles.

Delays to funding for dental service

Saves $390 million over 4 years from 2014-15

Defers funding to expand the National Partnership Agreement for Adult Public Dental Services from 2014-15 to 2015-16.

Cuts to schools

Saves $21 million over five years from 2014-15

Axing funding for the Centre for Quality Teaching and Learning announced by Labor under its Gonski plan.

Longer-term cuts to hospital funding

Saves $50 billion over 8 years from 2017

Winding back hospital funding agreements, negotiated under former Labor prime minister Kevin Rudd to "more realistic" deals.

Longer-term cuts to schools funding

Saves $30 billion from 2018 to 2024-25

Dumping Labor's Gonski school funding plan and adopting "sensible indexation arrangements for schools".