Sentencing Commission Refines Federal Punishment Rules for Clarity
Published Date: 5/4/2026
Notice
Summary
The United States Sentencing Commission is updating the rules that judges use to decide punishments in federal courts. These changes, affecting anyone involved in federal cases, will take effect on November 1, 2026. The updates aim to keep sentences fair and clear, with no new costs for the public.
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Analyzed Economic Effects
5 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 2 costs, 0 mixed.
Higher Loss Thresholds Change Sentencing
Several fraud/theft and related Guidelines now use higher loss thresholds: for example, Section 2B1.1 begins with "If the loss exceeded $9,000" (up from $6,500). Multiple related provisions were updated (examples include cultural heritage/paleontological thresholds moving to $3,500 and then referencing $9,000; other sections replace $6,500 with $9,000; the RICO/volume-of-commerce cutoffs for Sec. 2R1.1 start at $1,500,000 instead of $1,000,000; and tax-loss thresholds in Sec. 2T4.1 start at $3,500 instead of $2,500).
Federal Fine Ranges Increased
The Sentencing Commission increased the fine table in Sec. 5E1.2: for example, offense level 3 and below now shows a minimum of $300 and maximum of $15,000 (was $200 and $9,500), and the top bracket (38 and above) is now $70,000 to $700,000 (was $50,000 to $500,000). The notice also instructs that for offenses committed on or after November 1, 2015 but prior to November 1, 2026, the previous fine ranges (the version in effect on November 1, 2025) continue to apply.
Larger Monetary Amounts for Organizations
The Commission raised the monetary table in Sec. 8C2.4 used for organizational sentencing amounts. Examples: the amount for offense level 6 or less is now $10,000 (was $8,500), offense level 16 is $400,000 (was $30,000 in prior table entries), and many higher tiers now reach tens or hundreds of millions. These larger amounts affect organizations (including businesses) subject to federal sentencing calculations.
Amendments Take Effect November 1, 2026
If you are involved in a federal criminal case, the Sentencing Commission's amendments to the Guidelines take effect on November 1, 2026. The notice says the amendments were submitted to Congress on April 30, 2026, and will become effective on the date the Commission specified: November 1, 2026.
26 Rare Sentencing Enhancements Removed
The Commission deleted 26 specific offense characteristics that it found applied infrequently (some not at all in the last five fiscal years) to streamline the Guidelines Manual. The change is framed as a simplification step to make the Manual clearer.
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