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US February budget deficit flat at $308 billion, tariff revenues not yet hit by court ruling

By Thomson Reuters Mar 11, 2026 | 1:07 PM

By David Lawder

WASHINGTON, March 11 (Reuters) – The U.S. budget deficit for February was nearly flat with a year earlier at $308 billion as growth in receipts and outlays was largely even, with receipts from President ​Donald Trump’s tariffs not yet reflecting the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling ‌against many of his duties last month.

The U.S. Treasury Department said February receipts came in at $313 billion, up $17 billion or 6% from a year earlier, while outlays for the month totaled $621 billion, up $17 billion or 3% from February 2025, which was the first full month ‌of ​Trump’s second term. Both receipts and outlays for ⁠February were records, a Treasury ⁠official said.

Receipt growth was driven in part by a $15 billion increase in individual withheld income taxes in February, partly reflecting the payment of 2025 year-end bonuses, a Treasury official said. This was offset by a $7 billion increase ​in corporate tax refunds and a $6 billion increase in individual tax refunds driven by last year’s Republican-passed tax cut legislation.

The report showed a slight cooling ⁠of net customs duties in February to $26.6 ⁠billion, compared with $27.7 billion in January and over $30 billion in ​the final months of last year.

But the Treasury official said the budget data largely ​does not reflect tariff reductions resulting from the Supreme Court’s decision ‌striking down duties under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act as illegal, as tariffs are generally paid a month in arrears. The Customs and Border Protection agency stopped assessing those tariffs on imports starting on February 24.

The official said ⁠it was unclear how any IEEPA tariff refunds would show up in the data. CBP is preparing a streamlined refund process ordered by the Court of International Trade, ⁠and the Trump administration ‌has imposed a new, temporary 10% duty for 150 ⁠days.

The growth in February’s outlays was partly driven by ​interest on ‌the public debt, which grew $8 billion or 9% to $93 ​billion.  Military outlays ⁠rose $6 billion or 9% to $67 billion.

For the first five months of the 2026 fiscal year, the Treasury reported a deficit of $1.004 trillion, down $142 billion, or 12% from the same period a year earlier. Fiscal year-to-date receipts rose $205 billion, or 11% to $2.098 trillion, while outlays rose $63 billion, or 2%, to $3.012 trillion.

(Reporting by David Lawder; ​Editing by Andrea Ricci)