Tracking apportionments just got easier.
Apportionments are legally binding plans issued by the White House Office of Management and Budget that set the pace at which federal agencies may spend appropriated funds. OpenOMB's database makes apportionments easy to find and track.
Why are apportionments important?
Apportionments are how the president, acting through OMB, implements Congress's spending laws. Apportionments set the pace at which agencies may spend funds by specifying what money an agency may spend, when, and subject to what conditions. This is the second step in the life cycle of federal funds: Congress appropriates, OMB apportions, and agencies spend. Administrations of both parties have abused this authority to halt or cut off funding for enacted programs, making oversight of apportionments vital.
More apportionment FAQsApportionments are legally binding plans that show:
What money an agency can spend and when.
Any conditions OMB has put on agency access to funds.
Whether OMB is delaying access to, or withholding, funds.
Apportionment Statistics
- 48 New apportionments approved in the last 7 days
- 4,338 Total apportionments approved for FY2026
- 1,884 Total accounts tracked by OpenOMB
Recently Approved Apportionments
- Other Independent Agencies FY2026 NEH Spend Plan First seen April 7, 2026
- Other Independent Agencies FY2026 NEA Spend Plan First seen April 7, 2026
- Department of Agriculture FY2026 USDA NPA Spend Plan First seen April 7, 2026
- Department of Health and Human Services FY2025 HHS PFCP Spend Plan First seen April 7, 2026
- Department of Agriculture FY2026 USDA WIC Spend Plan First seen April 7, 2026
- Department of Education FY2026 ED IES Spend Plan First seen April 7, 2026
- Other Independent Agencies FY 2025 IMLS Spend Plan First seen April 7, 2026
- Department of Health and Human Services FY2025 HHS HMRF Spend Plan First seen April 7, 2026
- International Assistance Programs DFC Operating Plan - FY2025 - Final_508 First seen April 7, 2026
- Department of Labor FY2025 DOL Apprenticeship Program Spend Plan First seen April 7, 2026