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- Appropriations Status Table: FY2025 - Congress. gov
Appropriations Status Table: FY2025 Select Year: Note: To view AST Notes please click on the [+] icon in the table below Last updated and other notes
- Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2025
Fiscal Year 2025 contains the Budget Message of the President, information on the President’s priorities, and summary tables
- 2025 United States federal budget - Wikipedia
The United States federal budget for fiscal year 2025 runs from October 1, 2024 to September 30, 2025 The federal government is operating under a full-year continuing resolution passed in March 2025, which extends the 2024 budget for the whole 2025 fiscal year, with limited changes [1]
- President Bidens FY2025 Budget Now Available on GOVINFO - GPO
WASHINGTON —Today, the U S Government Publishing Office (GPO) and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) published President Biden’s Fiscal Year 2025 Budget GPO works with OMB to produce and distribute the President’s Budget, an annual tradition since the Budget and Accounting Act was enacted in 1921
- Budget FY 2025 - Historical Tables, Budget of the United . . .
Provides a wide range of data on Federal Government finances Many of the data series begin in 1940 and include estimates of the President's Budget for 2019-2029 Additionally, Table 1 1 provides data on receipts, outlays, and surpluses or deficits for 1901-1939 and for earlier multiyear periods
- Fiscal Year 2025 Enacted Legislation | House Committee on . . .
H R 1968 - Making continuing FY2025 appropriations to federal agencies for the remainder of FY2025 H R 10545 - Making further continuing appropriations for Fiscal Year 2025, and for other purposes (through March 14, 2025)
- Monthly Budget Review: June 2025
July 9, 2025 The federal budget deficit totaled $1 3 trillion in the first nine months of fiscal year 2025, the Congressional Budget Office estimates That amount is $65 billion more than the deficit recorded during the same period last fiscal year Revenues increased by $254 billion (or 7 percent), and outlays rose by $320 billion (or 6 percent)
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