Government Shutdown History Timeline: Every US Shutdown Since 1976
TL;DR / Key Takeaways
- The longest government shutdown in U.S. history was the 43-day shutdown from October 1 to November 12, 2025, surpassing the 35-day record set in 2018-2019.
- There have been 21+ funding gaps since 1976, with roughly 14 causing actual worker furloughs. Before 1980, funding gaps did not trigger shutdowns.
- The Civiletti opinions (1980-1981) by Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti established that the Antideficiency Act requires agencies to cease operations during a funding gap -- effectively inventing the modern government shutdown.
- Economic costs are significant: the 2025 shutdown cost an estimated $7-14 billion in permanently lost economic activity according to the CBO.
- The Government Employee Fair Treatment Act of 2019 guarantees back pay for furloughed federal workers, but federal contractors receive no such protection.
The United States is one of the few countries in the world that experiences government shutdowns. Most parliamentary democracies have automatic continuing resolutions or caretaker provisions that prevent funding gaps from halting government operations. In the U.S., shutdowns have become an increasingly common feature of fiscal brinksmanship, with three occurring in 2025-2026 alone.
This article provides a complete history of every federal government shutdown and funding gap since 1976, the legal framework that makes shutdowns possible, the economic consequences, and how each shutdown ended. For live tracking of the current situation, see our Government Shutdown Tracker.
How Government Shutdowns Became Possible
The Antideficiency Act
The Antideficiency Act, originally enacted in 1870 and significantly amended in 1950 and 1982, prohibits federal agencies from spending money without a congressional appropriation. Penalties for violations include termination, fines up to $5,000, and imprisonment up to two years -- though no one has ever been prosecuted under the Act.
The Civiletti Opinions: Inventing the Shutdown
Before 1980, funding gaps did not trigger shutdowns. Six gaps occurred between 1977 and 1980, ranging from 8 to 17 days, but agencies simply continued operating on the assumption funding would be restored. Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti changed everything with two legal opinions:
- April 25, 1980: Agencies "may obligate no further funds except as necessary to bring about the orderly termination" of functions during a funding gap.
- January 18, 1981: Agencies may continue work with "a reasonable and articulable connection between the function to be performed and the safety of human life or the protection of property." This created the "essential" vs. "non-essential" worker distinction.
The Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974 also plays a role, limiting the president's ability to impound (withhold) funds Congress has appropriated.
Complete Timeline: Every Shutdown and Funding Gap
Pre-Civiletti Funding Gaps (1976-1979)
These gaps did not trigger furloughs. Agencies continued operating normally.
| Dates | Duration | President | Cause |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 30 - Oct 11, 1976 | 10 days | Ford | Appropriations lapse |
| Sep 30 - Oct 13, 1977 | 12 days | Carter | Abortion funding dispute |
| Oct 31 - Nov 9, 1977 | 8 days | Carter | Abortion funding dispute |
| Nov 30 - Dec 9, 1977 | 8 days | Carter | Abortion funding dispute |
| Sep 30 - Oct 18, 1978 | 17 days | Carter | Appropriations lapse |
| Sep 30 - Oct 12, 1979 | 11 days | Carter | Appropriations lapse |
The Reagan Era (1981-1986)
The first shutdowns under the new Civiletti interpretation were brief and limited in scope.
| Dates | Duration | Furloughed | Cause |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nov 20-23, 1981 | 2 days | 241,000 | Reagan vetoed stopgap spending bill |
| Sep 30 - Oct 2, 1982 | 1 day | Minimal | Appropriations lapse |
| Dec 17-21, 1982 | 3 days | None reported | Public works/MX missile dispute |
| Nov 10-14, 1983 | 3 days | Minimal | Education/defense spending |
| Oct 3-5, 1984 | 1 day | 500,000 | Crime package/water projects |
| Oct 16-18, 1986 | 1 day | 500,000 | Omnibus appropriations delay |
1990: The Budget Deal Breakdown
The October 5-9, 1990 shutdown (3 days, 2,800 furloughed) occurred when President George H.W. Bush and Congress failed to agree on deficit reduction. Bush had famously pledged "read my lips: no new taxes" and the eventual deal that reopened the government included tax increases, contributing to his 1992 re-election loss.
1995-1996: Clinton vs. Gingrich
The most politically consequential shutdowns before the modern era occurred under President Clinton and House Speaker Newt Gingrich.
First shutdown (November 14-19, 1995): 5 days, 800,000 workers furloughed. Republicans sought to slow government spending growth, cut taxes, shift Medicaid to states, and reduce education and environmental spending. Clinton vetoed their budget proposals.
Second shutdown (December 16, 1995 - January 6, 1996): 21 days, 280,000 furloughed. At the time, this was the longest shutdown in U.S. history. Republicans accepted Clinton's budget after polls showed the public blamed them: a 1995 ABC News poll had 46% blaming Republicans vs. 27% blaming Clinton. The shutdowns cemented the political dynamic that would repeat for decades -- the party perceived as causing the shutdown tends to bear the electoral cost.
2013: The Affordable Care Act Standoff
The October 1-17, 2013 shutdown lasted 16 days and furloughed 800,000 federal employees. House Republicans refused to fund the government unless the Affordable Care Act was defunded or dismantled. The ACA's health insurance exchanges launched on schedule on October 1 because ACA funding was outside the annual appropriations process.
Standard & Poor's estimated the shutdown cost approximately $24 billion total. The CBO estimated $3 billion in back pay for furloughed workers plus $2 billion in lost tax revenues. Congress passed the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2014 on October 16 and Obama signed it shortly after midnight on October 17.
January 2018: The DACA Shutdown
A 2-3 day shutdown (January 20-22, 2018) occurred when Senate Democrats blocked a continuing resolution to pressure action on DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals). Approximately 692,900 workers were furloughed. Democrats agreed to reopen government after Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell promised to open debate on immigration in February.
2018-2019: The Border Wall Shutdown (35 Days)
The December 22, 2018 to January 25, 2019 shutdown lasted 35 days -- then the longest in U.S. history. President Trump demanded $5.7 billion for a border wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. Nine executive departments partially or fully shut down, affecting 800,000 employees: 420,000 essential workers continued without pay while 380,000 were furloughed.
The CBO estimated the shutdown cost at least $11 billion, with $3 billion permanently lost. During this shutdown, the Government Employee Fair Treatment Act of 2019 was signed on January 16, guaranteeing back pay for all furloughed workers during this and any future shutdown. Trump ultimately reopened the government without wall funding and later declared a national emergency to redirect military construction funds.
2025: The New Record -- 43 Days
The October 1 to November 12, 2025 shutdown became the longest in U.S. history at 43 days. The GOP-led House passed a measure to keep government running through November 21, but it failed in the Senate where Democrats pushed for an extension of expiring health insurance tax credits.
Approximately 750,000 workers were furloughed daily and 1.4 million essential workers continued without pay. SNAP benefits froze on November 1, affecting 42 million Americans. The CBO estimated the shutdown reduced Q4 GDP by roughly $18 billion, with $7-14 billion permanently lost. Senate Democrats crossed the aisle on November 12 to vote to reopen government until late January in exchange for a separate vote on health insurance credits.
2026: Multiple Shutdowns
Two additional shutdowns have occurred in 2026:
- January 31 - February 3, 2026 (4 days): Half of federal departments affected. Caused by delays in approving a funding package allowing time for immigration reform negotiations.
- February 14 - ongoing (DHS only): DHS funding expired after lawmakers left for recess without a deal on immigration enforcement reform, triggered by the shooting death of Alex Pretti by CBP agents in Minneapolis. TSA PreCheck and Global Entry were suspended February 22.
Economic Impact of Major Shutdowns
| Shutdown | Duration | Estimated Cost | Permanently Lost |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1995-96 | 21 days | ~$1.4 billion | Not estimated |
| 2013 | 16 days | $24 billion (S&P) | ~$2 billion |
| 2018-19 | 35 days | $11 billion (CBO) | $3 billion |
| 2025 | 43 days | ~$18 billion quarterly | $7-14 billion |
On average, roughly 650,000 employees are furloughed each week of a shutdown at a cost of about $4 billion per week in delayed wages. Most lost economic activity is recovered when the government reopens because workers receive back pay. But some losses are permanent: canceled flights, missed restaurant meals, postponed purchases, destroyed scientific studies, and deferred maintenance.
What Happens During a Shutdown
Services That Stop or Are Curtailed
- National parks and monuments close or reduce operations
- New passport and visa processing is delayed
- Federal court operations are limited
- FDA food inspections are reduced
- IRS tax refunds are delayed
- Small Business Administration stops processing loan applications
- SNAP benefits freeze in prolonged shutdowns (as seen in 2025 after 30 days)
- Scientific research is halted
Services That Continue
- Social Security checks (mandatory spending, not subject to annual appropriations)
- Medicare and Medicaid (mandatory spending)
- U.S. Postal Service (self-funded)
- Active duty military, federal law enforcement, TSA, air traffic controllers
- VA hospitals and federal medical facilities
Shutdown vs. Debt Ceiling Crisis
| Factor | Government Shutdown | Debt Ceiling Crisis |
|---|---|---|
| Cause | Congress fails to pass appropriations bills | Congress fails to raise the borrowing limit |
| Scope | ~25% of federal spending (discretionary) | All federal spending including mandatory programs |
| Programs at risk | Discretionary programs | Everything: Social Security, Medicare, debt interest |
| Severity | Disruptive but recoverable | Potentially catastrophic -- could trigger U.S. default |
| Precedent | Has occurred 20+ times | The U.S. has never defaulted on its debt |
How Shutdowns End
Shutdowns can only end when Congress passes and the president signs new funding legislation. The two main mechanisms are:
- Continuing resolutions (CRs): Temporary stopgap measures that typically continue funding at the prior year's levels. The October 1 deadline to enact all 12 appropriation bills has not been met since fiscal year 1997.
- Full-year appropriations bills: Congress is supposed to pass 12 individual bills each year (sometimes combined into "omnibus" packages). These set actual funding levels for each department.
The typical pattern: shutdown begins, public pressure builds, polls assign blame, the losing side capitulates, a CR passes, and the underlying dispute is deferred.
FAQ: Government Shutdown History
What was the longest government shutdown in US history?
The longest government shutdown in US history was the 43-day shutdown from October 1 to November 12, 2025, caused by a dispute over health insurance tax credit extensions. It surpassed the previous record of 35 days set during the December 2018 to January 2019 shutdown over border wall funding. Both shutdowns occurred during Trump presidencies.
How many government shutdowns have there been?
There have been approximately 21-22 federal funding gaps since 1976, with roughly 14 resulting in actual worker furloughs. Before 1980, funding gaps did not trigger shutdowns because agencies continued operating. Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti's 1980 legal opinion established that the Antideficiency Act requires agencies to cease operations during a funding gap.
Do federal workers get paid during a government shutdown?
Federal employees do not receive paychecks during a shutdown. However, since the Government Employee Fair Treatment Act of 2019, all furloughed federal workers are guaranteed back pay once the shutdown ends. Essential workers who continue working also receive back pay. Federal contractors are not covered by this guarantee.
What is the difference between a government shutdown and a debt ceiling crisis?
A government shutdown occurs when Congress fails to pass annual appropriations bills and affects about 25% of federal spending (discretionary programs). A debt ceiling crisis occurs when Congress fails to raise the borrowing limit, threatening all federal payments including Social Security, Medicare, and interest on the national debt. A shutdown is disruptive but recoverable; a default could be catastrophic for the global economy.
What causes a government shutdown?
A shutdown occurs when Congress fails to pass the 12 annual appropriations bills (or a continuing resolution) by the start of the fiscal year on October 1. Under the Antideficiency Act, federal agencies cannot spend money without an appropriation. Common causes include disputes over spending levels, policy riders, debt and deficit disagreements, and legislative leverage tactics.