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US January Budget Deficit Falls to $95 Billion as Revenue Gains Outpace Spending Growth

Posted on Thursday, February 12, 2026
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WASHINGTON, Feb. 11 (Reuters)—The U.S. government posted a $95 billion budget deficit in January, down $34 billion, or 26%, from a year earlier as revenue gains, including customs duties, outpaced growth in outlays, the Treasury Department said on Wednesday.

Adjusting for routine calendar shifts in benefit payments due to holidays, weekends, and other factors in both years, the Treasury said the January deficit would have been $30 billion, a decline of $52 billion, or 63%, from January 2025.

January receipts totaled $560 billion, up $47 billion, or 9%, from a year earlier, while outlays totaled $655 billion, up $13 billion, or 2%.

Through the first four months of the 2026 fiscal year that started Oct. 1, the deficit fell to $697 billion, down $143 billion, or 17%, from the same period of fiscal year 2025. Year-to-date receipts totaled $1.785 trillion, up $188 billion, or 12%, from the prior year period, while outlays reached $2.482 trillion, up $46 billion, or 2%.

January receipts and outlays were records for the month, but the deficit was not a record, a Treasury official told reporters. Year-to-date receipts and outlays were also both records for the first four months of a fiscal year, but the deficit was not a record.

Helping to drive both January and year-to-date results were sharply higher net customs receipts due to President Donald Trump’s tariffs. These totaled $27.7 billion in January, about the same level as December and slightly below the $30 billion monthly pace late last year. Customs duties in January 2025, the month that Trump took office and well before his tariff announcements, totaled $7.3 billion.

Fiscal year-to-date net customs duties were $117.7 billion, up from $28.2 billion a year earlier.

Also, cutting the deficit was a rare $12 billion decline in Treasury interest outlays on the public debt to $72 billion for January. The Treasury official said this stemmed from downward adjustments to payments on inflation-linked securities that were delayed by last year’s government shutdown and publication of consumer price index data.

Year-to-date Treasury debt interest totaled $426 billion, a record for the period, up $34 billion, or 9%.

(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Andrea Ricci)

Reprinted with permission from The Daily Signal by David Lawder.

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of AMAC or AMAC Action.

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Wilbur
Wilbur
3 months ago

Oh my, America’s ENEMIES WITHIN, (the America-LAST Illegals-FIRST DemoRATS) aren’t gonna like this great news. And these scum-nuts sure as hell aren’t going to give 47 any credit.

Dawn E
Dawn E
3 months ago

Great news!! That is truly awesome.

Billboy Baggins
Billboy Baggins
3 months ago

The bottom line, we still have a deficit.

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