The federal government risks defaulting on its debt sometime this summer or early fall without congressional action to address its debt ceiling, a new analysis finds.
The Bipartisan Policy Center (BPC) projected the so-called âX-Dateâ will âmost likely occur between August 15 and October 3â if Congress fails to act.
âCongress must address the debt limit ahead of the August recess,â Margaret Spellings, president and CEO of the Bipartisan Policy Center, said in a statement on Wednesday. âWith so many Americans worried about their own budgets and the state of the economy, Congress canât afford to inject any additional uncertainty into the mix.â
âThey need to act soon to prioritize our nationâs financial stability and reassure global markets that we take this responsibility seriously,â Spellings added.
While itâs difficult to pinpoint a hard X-Date, projections become more precise the closer the government arrives to running out of cash.Â
The debt limit, which caps how much money the Treasury can owe to pay the countryâs bills, was last suspended in 2023 as part of a bipartisan deal that staved off the threat of national default through early 2025.
The national debt stands at more than $36 trillion.
The Treasury Department has been implementing âextraordinary measuresâ to buy time for Congress to address the debt ceiling.
The recent estimate released Wednesday is in line with the latest estimate from the Congressional Budget Office dropped earlier this month that predicted âthe governmentâs ability to borrow using extraordinary measures would probably be exhausted between mid-August and the end of September 2025.â
The projected timelines have been pushed back compared to previous estimates from earlier this year.
In their projection on Wednesday, the BPC cited âstronger-than-expected tax revenue in April,â along with âsteady quarterly tax revenues this month and a relatively stable economyâ as key factors in Congress being afforded more time to address the nationâs debt ceiling.Â
âAs of June 18, Treasury hadâŻ$384 billion in cash on handâŻandâŻ$89 billion inâŻextraordinary measures â legally permitted accounting maneuvers â remaining to finance government operations,â the think tank said Wednesday.
âIf shortfalls in July and August are larger than expected, there would be a heightened X Date risk in the second half of August or early September, ahead of the September 15 due date for quarterly tax collections,â it added.
Congressional Republicans are looking to address the debt ceiling as part of a broader package to advance key parts of President Trumpâs tax agenda, which is estimated to add trillions of dollars to the nationâs deficits in the coming years.