Report: $186 billion in federal payment errors likely an undercount

Report: $186 billion in federal payment errors likely an undercount

Spread the love

Federal agencies made an estimated $186 billion in improper payments in fiscal year 2025, a $24 billion increase from the prior year, according to a new Government Accountability Office report released Monday.

The $186 billion in estimated improper payments is enough to fund the federal government’s entire Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which served an average of 41.7 million participants per month in fiscal year 2024, for nearly two years. SNAP provides food benefits to low-income families to supplement their grocery budget.

The increase marks a reversal after a sharp decline the previous year and pushes the government’s cumulative improper payment total since fiscal year 2003 to roughly $3 trillion. Improper payments are those that should not have been made or were made in the incorrect amount.

“Federal agencies must do more to protect taxpayer dollars from the errors that drive improper payments,” said Orice W. Brown, acting comptroller general of the United States. “This $186 billion problem demands urgent action – agencies need stronger controls, better data, a commitment to accountability, as well as robust Congressional oversight.”

The $186 billion is likely an undercount. The GAO report noted that the federal government remains unable to determine the full extent of its improper payments, a finding it has made every year since 1997.

Overpayments, those exceeding the amount owed, accounted for $153 billion, or about 82%, of the total. The remainder included $14.3 billion in unknown payments, $10 billion in underpayments and $8.4 billion in technically improper payments.

The offices of Sens. Rand Paul, R-Ky., and Gary Peters, D-Mich., and Reps. James Comer, R-Ky., and Robert Garcia, D-Calif., did not respond to questions about improper payments from The Center Square.

Five programs drive nearly three-quarters of the total

Fifteen agencies reported improper payment estimates across 64 federal programs. About 73% of the government-wide total, about $136 billion, was concentrated in just five program areas: Medicare, comprising three programs ($57 billion); Medicaid ($37 billion); the Department of the Treasury’s Earned Income Tax Credit ($21 billion); the Department of Agriculture’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program ($10 billion); and the Small Business Administration’s Shuttered Venue Operators Grant program ($10 billion).

Nineteen programs reported improper payment rates above 10%, and six reported rates above 25%. The Shuttered Venue Operators Grant program, which provided emergency assistance to live venue operators affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, reported the highest error rate at 68.9%. The Farm Service Agency’s Emergency Conservation Program came in at 55.5%. The Earned Income Tax Credit, a refundable federal tax credit for low- to moderate-income workers, reported a 32.7% error rate.

The $24 billion jump from fiscal year 2024 is largely attributable to programs reporting estimates for the first time. The Shuttered Venue Operators Grant program alone accounted for $10.1 billion of the increase. Fiscal year 2025 was the first year SBA reported improper payment estimates for the program. Congress created the Shuttered Venue Operators Grant program in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The program included more than $16 billion in grants to shuttered venues, according to the Small Business Administration.

Medicaid contributed another $6.3 billion to the increase. The Department of Health and Human Services attributed the rise to increased errors in eligibility redeterminations and provider screening as pandemic-era flexibilities in the program were phased out.

The Earned Income Tax Credit jumped by $5.2 billion. The Department of the Treasury provided no explanation for the increase.

Not all the news was bad. Medicare Fee-for-Service reported a $2.9 billion decline in improper payments, which HHS attributed to enhanced internal controls related to prior authorizations.

Compliance remains a chronic problem

Twelve of the 24 major federal agencies covered by the Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990 fully complied with federal payment integrity law in fiscal year 2024, down from 13 the prior year. Thirteen agencies received a combined 61 recommendations from their inspectors general, 20 of which were repeated from prior years.

Noncompliant agencies included the Departments of Agriculture, Defense, Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development, Labor, Treasury, Veterans Affairs, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Office of Personnel Management, the Small Business Administration, the Social Security Administration, and the U.S. Agency for International Development.

The most common compliance failure: Nine of 14 agencies for which the criterion applied had at least one program reporting an improper payment rate above 10%, the threshold agencies must stay under to be considered compliant.

The full extent remains unknown

The GAO report warned that the $186 billion total does not capture the full scope of government-wide improper payments. Several programs determined to be susceptible to significant payment errors were not included in the estimate.

Among the most notable omissions: the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program, which spent about $16.5 billion in fiscal year 2025. HHS does not calculate or report improper payment amounts for TANF due to statutory limitations. GAO recommended in April 2022 that Congress give HHS the authority to require states to report the data needed to estimate TANF improper payments. Congress has not acted on that recommendation.

One fix, nine still waiting

Congress has acted on one of 10 recommendations the GAO made in 2022 to enhance transparency and accountability of federal spending. In February 2026, President Donald Trump signed into law the Ending Improper Payments to Deceased People Act, which makes permanent a pilot program requiring the Social Security Administration to share its Death Master File with the Treasury Department’s Do Not Pay system. The law takes effect in December 2026.

The legislation drew bipartisan support. Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., who helped lead the bill, said stopping fraudulent payments to dead people was long overdue.

“Using dead Americans to rip off taxpayers is as low as it gets,” Kennedy said. “That’s why I wrote this common-sense bill to end this outrageous abuse permanently.”

Peters, who co-sponsored the legislation, said in a February statement that the bill would help safeguard taxpayer dollars.

“This vital bill will help save millions of taxpayer dollars by ensuring the Social Security Administration will be able to permanently share important data with the Treasury Department’s Do Not Pay system, preventing wrongful payments to deceased individuals,” Peters said.

Congressional efforts to require greater transparency on improper payments have stalled. The Improper Payments Transparency Act, which would have required the president’s annual budget request to include detailed information on payment errors and corrective actions, was introduced in March 2025 but never advanced. A similar bill failed to advance in the prior Congress as well.

The other nine of GAO’s 2022 recommendations remain open, including a call to designate all new federal programs making more than $100 million in payments in any one fiscal year as susceptible to improper payments, and to establish a permanent data analytics center of excellence to help identify improper payments and fraud.

Since fiscal year 2003, improper payment estimates by executive branch agencies have totaled roughly $3 trillion. GAO has identified improper payments as a material weakness in federal financial audits every year since 1997. That’s nearly three decades without resolution.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Feds push back on Minnesota prosecution of ICE agent

Feds push back on Minnesota prosecution of ICE agent

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Federal immigration officials are calling Minnesota’s prosecution of an ICE agent a “political stunt” after Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty announced criminal charges tied to...
Will County Board Graphic.02

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Legislative Committee for May 5, 2026

Will County Board Legislative Committee Meeting | May 5, 2026 The Will County Board Legislative Committee navigated a heavy policy agenda during its May 5, 2026, meeting, balancing extensive state...
Minnesota mobile voting push stalls as session ends

Minnesota mobile voting push stalls as session ends

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square As the 2026 Minnesota legislative session came to a close over the weekend, several special interest efforts ultimately failed to advance. One of those was...
Taxpayers fund factories Pentagon says contractors should build

Taxpayers fund factories Pentagon says contractors should build

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The Pentagon is asking Congress to approve a new model that expects defense contractors to fund their own factory expansions, while simultaneously handing out $191...
Renewed call for Trump to pardon Texas Republican political consultant

Renewed call for Trump to pardon Texas Republican political consultant

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square After a Trump administration settlement with the IRS was announced including a new $1.8 billion weaponization fund for “political prisoners,” Texans are renewing their call...
Op-Ed: Illinois is closed for business

Op-Ed: Illinois is closed for business

By Alan Jernigan and Joshua MeyerThe Center Square The policies coming from Springfield send a clear message: Illinois is closed for business. While other states enact pro-growth policies and create...
Illinois Quick Hits: Proposal would allow two-year, online car registration

Illinois Quick Hits: Proposal would allow two-year, online car registration

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois House Republican Leader Tony McCombie has filed legislation she says will make the vehicle registration process...
Will County Board Graphic.04

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Executive Committee for May 14, 2026

Will County Board Executive Committee Meeting | May 14, 2026 The Will County Board Executive Committee held a four-hour-plus meeting on May 14, 2026, dominated by a deeply contested vote...
Flint, Detroit top list of most-affordable U.S. cities for homebuyers

Flint, Detroit top list of most-affordable U.S. cities for homebuyers

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Flint and Detroit rank as the two most-affordable cities in the nation for homebuyers, according to a new WalletHub report. The analysis compared 300 U.S....
SCOTUS turns away Palatine HS teacher fired over anti-BLM Facebook posts

SCOTUS turns away Palatine HS teacher fired over anti-BLM Facebook posts

By Jonathan Bilyk | Legal NewslineeThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court will not review lower courts' decisions finding a suburban school district did not violate the constitutional rights of...
WATCH: Critics say political protests interfere with education

WATCH: Critics say political protests interfere with education

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square As student walkouts and protests tied to immigration enforcement increase nationwide, education experts are raising concerns about declining civics proficiency among K-12 students and the...
Congressional candidates discuss agriculture, healthcare

Congressional candidates discuss agriculture, healthcare

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Editor's note: This is the part of a series of stories that are appearing this week on the June 2 primary in California. The stories...
Trump admin still releasing minors into U.S., well below Biden era

Trump admin still releasing minors into U.S., well below Biden era

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square The Trump administration is still releasing unaccompanied alien children (UAC)s into the U.S., although the numbers are dramatically lower than the unprecedented numbers released by...
TrumpRx expanding, offering generic prescription drugs

TrumpRx expanding, offering generic prescription drugs

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square TrumpRx is expanding to about seven times its current size, adding more than 600 generic prescription drugs to the months-old direct-to-consumer government website, the president...
Trump pauses planned military strikes against Iran, cites further negotiations

Trump pauses planned military strikes against Iran, cites further negotiations

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Renewed military strikes against Iran have been postponed once again, President Donald Trump said Monday. In a Truth Social post, the president says a military...