GSA / US-performance-reporting

Helping the Nation join forces by building and diffusing official knowledge about the U.S. government’s goals, progress, and results
https://www.performance.gov/
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:construction: IN PROGRESS - NOT FINAL

U.S. Performance Reporting

"U.S. Performance Reporting" refers to official information about the Federal government's strategic goals, progress, and results, as reported by Federal agencies under the Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA). GPRA is a landmark piece of legislation that defines how the Federal government conducts strategic planning and related activities. For major U.S. agencies, it requires participation from senior officials, notably Deputy Secretaries. It was established in 1993 and last updated in 2010.

Performance.gov

"The Great Experiment at work"

Collage of American symbols, including the bald eagle and statue of Liberty

Performance.gov is a national project from the U.S. government dedicated to accelerating progress toward the strategic goals set by the Federal government. Across events, programs, and data-rich reporting—prepared by the teams directly responsible for U.S. strategy execution—Performance.gov highlights progress achieved, holds government accountable to measurable results, and brings people together from across sectors to address the Nation’s major challenges, as targeted by the U.S. strategic portfolio. Performance.gov fulfills the law established by the Government Performance and Results Modernization Act of 2010 that Federal performance information be available from a single website.

Mission

We help the Nation join forces by building and diffusing official knowledge about the U.S. government’s goals, progress, and results.

Target User

Everyone interested in impacting what the Federal government achieves for the American people. That tends to be civil society professionals responsible for influencing government's outcomes, including: Federal employees; local and state officials; government affairs professionals; Congressional staffers; advocacy groups; researchers; and journalists.

Learn more

How to work with us

We recommend bookmarking this link for easy access to forms you can use to submit requests, bug reports, and more.