Click here for access to all Appropriations resources.
FY 2027 House Appropriations Action:
Subcomm: 04/17/2026 - Subcommittee approved FSGG bill: GOP Release | GOP Stmt | Text | GOP Summary | Dem Stmt | Dem Summary | Dem Fact Sheet
Full Comm: 04/22/2026 - Appropriations Committee approved the FY 2027 Financial Services and General Government Appropriations bill on a 34-28 party line vote: GOP Stmt | Text before amendments | Rpt | GOP Summary | Dem Stmt | Dem Summary | Dem Fact Sheet
Floor:
FY 2027 Senate Appropriations Action:
Full Comm:
Floor:
FY 2027 Action on Appropriations Conference Report:
Agreement:
House Passage:
Senate Passage:
President:
FY 2026 House Action:
Subcomm: 7/21/25 - approved bill: Text | R-Summ | R-Stmt | D-Summ | D-Stmt | D-FactSheet
Full Comm: 9/3/25 - approved bill 35-28: Text | Rpt | Summary | R-Stmt | Adopted Amendments | D-Summ | D-Stmt | D-FactSheet
Floor:
FY 2026 Senate Action:
Subcomm:
Full Comm: 11/24/25: Senate Approps Republicans release Financial Services General Govt bill without bipartisan agreement: Text | Rpt | Dem Stmt
Floor: N/A: Appropriators released compromise language 1/11/26.
FY 2026 Action on Conference Report:
Agreement: 1/11/26: compromise bill released - Text | Bill Summary (Sen.GOP) | Bill Summary (Sen.Dem.) | Bill Summary (Hse.GOP) | Bill Summary (Hse.Dem) | Joint Explanatory Statement | Earmarks
House Passage: 2/3/26: House passed 217-214 a 5-bill consolidated package HR 7148 including Defense, FSGG, L-HHS-Ed, NS-State, T-HUD, and a 2-week CR for Homeland Security.
Senate Passage: 1/30/2026: Senate passed 71-29 a 5-bill consolidated package HR 7148 including Defense, FSGG, L-HHS-Ed, NS-State, T-HUD, and a 2-week CR for Homeland Security.
President: 2/3/26: Signed into law. PL 119-75
The FSGG bill funds the following agencies:
Department of the Treasury (except International Affairs Technical Assistance, and International Financial Institutions)
District of Columbia
-Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency for the District of Columbia
-District of Columbia Courts
-District of Columbia Public Defender Service
Executive Office of the President (except OSTP, USTR, CEQ)
-Council of Economic Advisers
-Government-wide Management Councils
-High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas (ONDCP)
-National Security Council and Homeland Security Council (Executive Office of the President)
-Office of Administration (Executive Office of the President)
-Office of Management and Budget (Executive Office of the President)
-White House
Judiciary
-Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts
-Federal Judicial Center
-Supreme Court of the United States
-U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
-U.S. Court of International Trade
Treasury
-Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (Treasury)
-Bureau of the Fiscal Service [Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner in 2012 directed the Bureau of the Public Debt be combined with the Financial Management Service into the single Bureau of the Fiscal Service.]
-Community Development Financial Institutions Fund Program Account (Treasury)
-Community Development Revolving Loan Fund
-Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (Treasury)
-Financial Management Service (Treasury)
-Internal Revenue Service (Treasury)
-U.S. Mint (Treasury)
Independent Agencies:
-Administrative Conference of the United States
-Christopher Columbus Fellowship Foundation
-Commodity Futures Trading Commission (in the House, funded by the Ag bill)
-Consumer Product Safety Commission
-Election Assistance Commission
-Federal Communications Commission
-Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Office of the Inspector General
-Federal Election Commission
-Federal Labor Relations Authority
-Federal Trade Commission
-General Services Administration
--Allowances and Office Staff for Former Presidents (GSA)
--Public Buildings Service (GSA)
-Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation
-Merit Systems Protection Board
-Morris K. Udall and Stewart L. Udall Foundation
-National Archives and Records Administration
--National Historical Publications and Records Commission
-National Credit Union Administration
-Office of Government Ethics
-Office of Personnel Management (OPM)
--President’s Commission on White House Fellows (OPM)
-Office of Special Counsel
-Postal Regulatory Commission
-Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board
-Securities and Exchange Commission
-Selective Service System
-Small Business Administration
--Disaster Loans Program (Small Business Administration)
-Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program
-United States Postal Service:
--Office of Inspector General
--Payment to the Postal Service Fund
-United States Tax Court
Omnibus or Consolidated: all (or most) regular appropriations bills packaged together.
Minibus: several regular appropriations bills packaged together.
CR: continues agency funding at a particular level–often the previous year–without detailed appropriations.
Cromnibus: a CR for some agencies and detailed appropriations for others.
Note on Joint Statements: In many cases, (House-Senate) joint explanatory statements on omnibus appropriations bills are printed only in the Congressional Record–which is impossible to read on mobile devices. In those cases, we have uploaded House Rules Committee PDFs.
At the beginning of the 110th Congress (2007), jurisdiction over the Departments of Transportation, Treasury, and Housing and Urban Affairs was divided to create subcommittees in both chambers on Financial Services and General Government (including the Treasury Department, the Judiciary, the Executive Office of the President, the Office of Personnel Management, the Postal Service, the District of Columbia, and other related agencies, such as the Federal Elections Commission, Federal Trade Commission, Securities and Exchange Commission, and Small Business Administration) and Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and related agencies.
Click HERE to access Transportation, Treasury, HUD appropriations bills and report language from FY 2007 back to FY 1999. (Be sure to enter the fiscal year you are researching in the upper left corner after you open the link.) For FYs 1998 back to 1986, click here.