US posts record $145 billion December deficit as outlays outpace receipts

  • Summary
  • December customs receipts dip to $27.9 billion from $30-billion-a-month range
  • U.S. Treasury says after calendar adjustments, December deficit would have fallen
  • Outlays, receipts reach records for ​first three months of fiscal 2026

WASHINGTON, Jan 13 (Reuters) – The U.S. government posted a $145 billion budget deficit ‌for December, up 67% or $58 billion from a year earlier due to record outlays that were inflated by calendar shifts in benefit payments and receipts, the Treasury Department said on Tuesday.

The report showed that revenue growth from President Donald Trump’s tariffs may have plateaued, as December net customs receipts totaled $27.9 billion, down from the low $30 billion range in recent months but far above ‌the $6.8 billion recorded in December 2024.

Net customs receipts for the first three months of fiscal ​2026, which started October 1, totaled $90 billion compared to $20.8 billion in the prior-year period.

The Trump administration implemented some tariff-cutting trade deals in November, including 10 percentage-point reductions in duties on imports from China and South Korea. The Supreme Court also ‍could soon rule on legal challenges to Trump’s tariffs under an emergency sanctions law. A ruling against those duties would further cut customs receipts.

The Treasury said that after making adjustments to December budget results in both 2024 and 2025, the December deficit would have been $112 ⁠billion, a decrease of $14 billion or 11% from the December 2024 budget gap.

Some $32 billion in January 2026 benefit payments ‍were shifted into December because the new year started on a weekend, while a net $51 billion in December 2024 benefits were shifted to other months. But ‌the $145 ‌billion reported deficit was a record for the month, a Treasury official said.

Military spending in December reached $98 billion, up $20 billion or 25% from a year earlier, due in part to the resumption of payments delayed by a government shutdown in October, the Treasury official said.

LOWER THREE-MONTH DEFICIT

The deficit for the first three months of fiscal 2026, which started on October ⁠1, 2025, totaled $602 billion, down $109 billion ⁠or 15% from the ​same period a year earlier amid record receipts and outlays.

Fiscal year-to-date receipts totaled $1.225 trillion, up $142 billion or 13% from a year earlier and a record for the period, due in part to collection of tax payments delayed by last year’s California wildfires.

Outlays for ‍the first three months of fiscal 2026 were also a record, reaching $1.827 trillion, up $33 billion or 2% from the year-earlier period.

The year-to-date outlay growth was fueled by increases in Social Security and healthcare programs, as well as U.S. Treasury public debt interest, which grew $46 billion, or ​15% from a year earlier, to $355 billion.

The Treasury official said the ‍interest cost increase was driven largely by the growth of the U.S. debt load, adding that the weighted average interest rate paid by the Treasury ​in December was 3.32%, only slightly above the 3.28% paid a year earlier.

reuters

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