The office & budget Map
The Office & Budget Map collects, synthesizes, and visualizes timely data, as it becomes available, on over 28,000 federal office locations, agency workforce, FY 2026 budget data, and the localized effects of federal workforce and budget change.
This tool represents a rapidly evolving landscape. We have started with a partial list of federal agencies most impacted by budget changes (adds and cuts), and will be adding more in the coming weeks. We have made every effort to provide as granular an accounting of budget changes–including additions and subtractions—as possible, but detailed information about the FY 2026 budget is still forthcoming. While we will update this map regularly, you may find areas that need updating. Due to the complex and changing nature of budget documents and inconsistencies between budget documents, you may also find numbers that do not represent the most recent understanding of the budgetary landscape. This map will be updated as more complete data about the final FY 2026 budget becomes available. Please reach out via email at [email protected] if you would like to support our work, share data, or provide feedback.
This Map is best experienced on desktop.
- Rural Counties
- Indigenous Lands
- Majority Non-White
- Poverty Rate >= 20%
- Boundaries
- 0 - 50
- 50 - 100
- 100 - 250
- 250 - 500
- 500 - 1,000
- 1,000 - 5,000
- 5,000 - 10,000
- >10,000
Map Last Updated: 7/15/2025
If you reference, reproduce, or use data or content from this website, please include a citation and proper attribution. We ask that you cite The Impact Project with a direct link to our website. For example, “Data Provided by The Impact Project (2025) theimpactproject.org.”
How to Use the Map
Office Filter
This filter will show you every federal office identified in our search of publicly available websites and databases.
- Dots: Each dot on the map represents individual offices. Clicking a dot reveals the direct and indirect effect of policy, funding, and workforce changes on communities, and source links.
- Hover Details:
- Offices: When you hover over an office location, you will see the agency name and any available programmatic data, as well as available data about budget changes. Note that there may be more than one dot at a single address in cases where different agencies or programs share space.
- States: Hovering over a state reveals an overview of federal offices and specific budget impacts per state, including statewide impacts to SNAP and Medicaid.
- Click Details: When you click on an office dot, you will see the agency name and any available programmatic data, as well as available data about the purpose of the office or agency (e.g., program mission) and workforce and budget changes.
- Office Dashboards: Clicking a program or agency dashboard provides a detailed view of its federal workforce, program funding, impacts, and cuts. These dashboards will be expanded to include more data and analyses in the coming weeks.
- Filters & Tags: You can sort office data using the legend on the left-hand side of the map:
- Agency: Select one or more agencies to see local offices
- Budget Coding: Each dot is color-coded with a budget status that identifies whether the program or agency’s FY26 budget is larger, the same, or smaller than the FY25 enacted budget.
- Office Status Tags: Choose these to identify offices that have been closed or are likely to be closed based on budget changes.
- Zooming: You can zoom in or out using the +/- buttons in the upper right corner of the map.
Sources for the underlying sources of data are linked in each office dot.
Office & Budget Dashboards
To gain a deeper understanding of data represented in the Office & Budget Map, including summaries of federal offices nationwide and by state, and how the budget will impact various programs, click here.
Office & Budget Definitions
Budget Sources
We have made every effort to provide as granular an accounting of budget changes–including additions and subtractions—as possible, but detailed information about the FY 2026 budget is still forthcoming as of 7/11/25. Therefore, we provide the most recent available data from one of these sources:
- Prior Budget (FY24 or FY25): This value provides a baseline to compare potential changes within the Fiscal Year (FY) 2026 budget. Values under this header may be representative of the FY 2024 budget or the FY 2025 budget, depending on available data.
- Agency Budget Requests (FY26): These values reflect agencies’ requests for FY 2026 funding. Agency budgets often include detailed line-item accounting of budgets by program, changes in employment needs, and structural changes. (Published May 2025)
- Presidential Budget (FY26): These values reflect the President’s recommendations for Congress for the federal fiscal policy for the upcoming fiscal year. This budget details the administration’s priorities for federal programs for FY26 and through the next nine years. The Presidential budget also includes proposals to alter mandatory programs. (Published May 2025)
- House Budget (FY26): Subcommittees with oversight jurisdiction over different sectors to which federal programs belong (e.g.,, Agriculture, Defense, etc.) work with the House at large to create a budget resolution, or their own version of the funding bill. These values represent the funding the House has proposed to appropriate to that program in FY2026. (June 2025)
- Senate Budget (FY26): Subcommittees focused on different sectors to which federal programs belong (e.g., Agriculture, Defense, etc.) work with the Senate at large to create a budget resolution, or their own version of the funding bill. These values represent the funding the Senate has proposed to appropriate to that program in FY2026. (June 2025)
- Budget Reconciliation (FY26): Once the House and Senate have each passed a version of the funding bill, they must reconcile their differences and pass a unified version of the funding bill. This number reflects the budget for federal programs that will be sent to the President to be signed into law or vetoed. (Passed July 2025)
- Rescissions (FY26): Rescissions refer to the reversal of prior appropriations, or the cancellation of previously Congressionally approved funding.
Note that the reliability of these sources goes from least reliable at the top of the list, to most reliable on the bottom. We will update our budget numbers as final reports on the approved FY 2026 Budgets are made available.
Budget Categories
Budget dashboards that accompany this map categorize FY26 Budget changes based on the following categories:
Agriculture, Nutrition, & Forestry: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types for agricultural matters (USDA), including nutrition programs such as SNAP, as well as the U.S. Forest Service.
Armed Services: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types for the military, including the various branches as well as the Department of Defense (DOD).
Banking, Housing, & Urban Affairs: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types for Housing and Urban Development (HUD).
Education & Workforce: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types for the Department of Education (DOE) and the Department of Labor (DOL).
Energy & Commerce: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types for agencies such as the Department of Energy (DOE) and the Department of Commerce (DOC).
Environment & Natural Resources: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types for agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Department of the Interior (DOI).
Financial Services: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types related to the financial agencies such as the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the IRS.
Foreign Affairs & Relations: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types related to the Department of State and USAID.
Health: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types related to the agencies under the umbrella of Health and Human Services (HHS).
Homeland Security: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types related to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
Judiciary: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types related to agencies focused on justice, such as the Department of Justice (DOJ).
Legislative: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types related to legislative bodies such as the House and Senate.
Oversight, Rules, Administration, & Ethics: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types for agencies that oversee the federal government and provide structure in the forms of rules, administration, and ethics.
Other: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types for a broad range of independent federal agencies that do not readily fit in the other categories.
Small Business & Entrepreneurs: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types for agencies such as the Small Business Administration (SBA).
Science, Space, & Technology: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types for agencies such as NASA and the National Science Foundation (NSF).
Transportation & Infrastructure: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types related to the Department of Transportation as well as agencies related to infrastructure.
Ways & Means: This category reflects the budget proposals across the various budget types related to tax cuts.
Impact Project data is collected from diverse governmental and non-governmental sources.
We collect data from a wide range of government and non-government sources using rigorous methodologies to optimize for accuracy and clarity. While we verify information to the extent possible, the data available is incomplete and therefore will be constantly evolving and you may find inaccuracies. For example, stories included in The Impact Map reflect a given point in time; to increase transparency, a date of entry on the Map is included to indicate when a story was collected. As a result, all of the Map’s data is provided ‘as-is,’ without warranties of any kind, either expressed or implied, including but not limited to accuracy, reliability, or fitness for any particular purpose.
Data Integrity & Transparency
- Methodology: Our approach to data collection and analysis is fully detailed on the Data Transparency page.
- Newspaper Articles & Government Databases: All data is collected using standardized methodologies from public sources.
- Location data: We geocode impacts to points on the map using the Google Maps API, which takes a location name and provides latitude and longitude data that we enter into mapping software. Accuracy of geocoded data varies depending on the quality of the underlying data, precision of the address input, and the location type.
Note that office locations are geocoded to the zipcode, not street address, to protect the safety of federal workers.
- Inconsistencies: You may have noticed inconsistencies in our data. Some of these may be errors on our end, but others are created by flaws, inconsistencies, or gaps in the underlying data. For example, there are inconsistencies between how the FY 2025 budget and FY 2026 budgets are organized and different levels of detail provided by each agency budget. We will continue to work to represent the best available data and explain it here. If you find errors, please contact us at [email protected].
If you reference, reproduce, or use data or content from this website, please include a citation and proper attribution by citing The Impact Project with a direct link to our website. For example, “Data Provided by The Impact Project (2025) theimpactproject.org.”
The Office & Budget Map will evolve with new data and expanded geographic coverage, enabling it to provide analysis of long-term impacts. Join us in building a clearer, more comprehensive understanding of how government decisions shape our world.