Title 31 › Subtitle SUBTITLE III— - FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT › Chapter CHAPTER 33— - DEPOSITING, KEEPING, AND PAYING MONEY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - IMPROPER PAYMENTS › § 3352
Requires agency leaders to check their programs and payments for mistakes and waste, and to report what they find and what they will do about it. Each agency head must review every program at least once every 3 fiscal years and flag programs that might have “significant” improper payments. “Significant” means the program’s improper payments plus payments that cannot be judged because of missing papers were either (i) more than $10,000,000 and more than 1.5 percent of program outlays in the prior fiscal year, or (ii) more than $100,000,000. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) must give guidance within 1 year and picks high‑priority programs each year. Agencies must publish an annual list of assessed programs and any big changes in how they do reviews. For OMB‑listed high‑priority programs, agencies must set annual targets and regular actions, make an annual public report (but not include DOJ referral details), and meet with OMB at least once a year. Inspectors General will review the agency’s risk estimates, controls, and methods and may send recommendations to Congress. For each program found at risk, agencies must produce a statistically valid estimate (or an OMB‑approved method) of improper payments and include it with their annual financial statement. Payments with missing or insufficient documentation count as improper unless proven otherwise. Agencies must also report what caused the improper payments, what steps they are taking and when those steps will be done, whether they have the needed internal controls, staff, and IT, any budget requests for more resources, OMB‑approved reduction targets, accountability measures, and timelines. Agencies must run recovery audits for programs that spend $1,000,000 or more a year when it is cost‑effective, give priority to recent and high‑risk payments, and may use contractors (but contractors cannot make final legal decisions about overpayments). Contracts must require reports and fraud notifications. Recovered amounts are distributed so that up to 25 percent can fund agency financial management improvements, up to 25 percent can be credited back to the original appropriation or fund, up to 5 percent can go to the agency Inspector General, and other amounts generally go to the Treasury (with special rules for trust or special funds). OMB must send an annual governmentwide report to Congress and the Comptroller General summarizing agency reports, compliance status, governmentwide targets, and a governmentwide improper payment estimate.
Full Legal Text
Money and Finance — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
31 U.S.C. § 3352
Title 31 — Money and Finance
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73