Title 5Government Organization and EmployeesRelease 119-73

§4302 Establishment of performance appraisal systems

Title 5 › Part PART III— - EMPLOYEES › Subpart Subpart C— - Employee Performance › Chapter CHAPTER 43— - PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - GENERAL PROVISIONS › § 4302

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

Each agency must create one or more performance review systems. The systems must give regular job reviews, let employees help set performance standards, and use review results for training, rewards, reassignments, promotions, reductions in grade, keeping, or removing employees. The agency head, working with the Director of OPM and the Special Counsel, must set criteria that become a key part of supervisors’ job expectations and that protect whistleblowers. Those criteria must look at how supervisors respond when employees make protected disclosures, how they try to resolve those disclosures, whether they make employees feel safe reporting problems, and whether the agency ever made agreements with people who alleged a supervisor committed a prohibited personnel practice and how often. Under rules OPM writes, the systems must use objective, job-related standards, tell employees their standards and main job elements as soon as possible and by October 1, 1981 for first appraisals and at the start of each appraisal period after that, evaluate employees on those standards, reward good work, help fix poor work, and reassign or remove employees only after giving them a chance to improve. Agencies may run these systems electronically under OPM rules. Definitions: agency — an employer covered by the whistleblower rules in 2302(b)(8) and (9); prohibited personnel practice — the actions listed in 2302(a)(1); supervisory employee — someone who would be a supervisor under section 7103(a); whistleblower — an employee who makes a disclosure described in 2302(b)(8).

Full Legal Text

Title 5, §4302

Government Organization and Employees — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)Each agency shall develop one or more performance appraisal systems which—
(1)provide for periodic appraisals of job performance of employees;
(2)encourage employee participation in establishing performance standards; and
(3)use the results of performance appraisals as a basis for training, rewarding, reassigning, promoting, reducing in grade, retaining, and removing employees.
(b)(1)The head of each agency, in consultation with the Director of the Office of Personnel Management and the Special Counsel, shall develop criteria that—
(A)the head of the agency shall use as a critical element for establishing the job requirements of a supervisory employee; and
(B)promote the protection of whistleblowers.
(2)The criteria required under paragraph (1) shall include—
(A)principles for the protection of whistleblowers, such as the degree to which supervisory employees—
(i)respond constructively when employees of the agency make disclosures described in subparagraph (A) or (B) of section 2302(b)(8);
(ii)take responsible actions to resolve the disclosures described in clause (i); and
(iii)foster an environment in which employees of the agency feel comfortable making disclosures described in clause (i) to supervisory employees or other appropriate authorities; and
(B)for each supervisory employee—
(i)whether the agency entered into an agreement with an individual who alleged that the supervisory employee committed a prohibited personnel practice; and
(ii)if the agency entered into an agreement described in clause (i), the number of instances in which the agency entered into such an agreement with respect to the supervisory employee.
(3)In this subsection—
(A)the term “agency” means any entity the employees of which are covered under paragraphs (8) and (9) of section 2302(b), without regard to whether any other provision of this section is applicable to the entity;
(B)the term “prohibited personnel practice” has the meaning given the term in section 2302(a)(1);
(C)the term “supervisory employee” means an employee who would be a supervisor, as defined in section 7103(a), if the agency employing the employee was an agency for purposes of chapter 71; and
(D)the term “whistleblower” means an employee who makes a disclosure described in section 2302(b)(8).
(c)Under regulations which the Office of Personnel Management shall prescribe, each performance appraisal system shall provide for—
(1)establishing performance standards which will, to the maximum extent feasible, permit the accurate evaluation of job performance on the basis of objective criteria (which may include the extent of courtesy demonstrated to the public) related to the job in question for each employee or position under the system;
(2)as soon as practicable, but not later than October 1, 1981, with respect to initial appraisal periods, and thereafter at the beginning of each following appraisal period, communicating to each employee the performance standards and the critical elements of the employee’s position;
(3)evaluating each employee during the appraisal period on such standards;
(4)recognizing and rewarding employees whose performance so warrants;
(5)assisting employees in improving unacceptable performance; and
(6)reassigning, reducing in grade, or removing employees who continue to have unacceptable performance but only after an opportunity to demonstrate acceptable performance.
(d)In accordance with regulations which the Office shall prescribe, the head of an agency may administer and maintain a performance appraisal system electronically.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Historical and Revision Notes

DerivationU.S. CodeRevised Statutes andStatutes at Large 5 U.S.C. 2002.Sept. 30, 1950, ch. 1123, § 3, 64 Stat. 1098. Standard changes are made to conform with the definitions applicable and the style of this title as outlined in the preface to the report.

Editorial Notes

Amendments

2017—Subsecs. (b) to (d). Pub. L. 115–91 added subsec. (b) and redesignated former subsecs. (b) and (c) as (c) and (d), respectively. 2000—Subsec. (c). Pub. L. 106–398 added subsec. (c). 1992—Subsec. (a)(3). Pub. L. 102–378 substituted a period for semicolon at end. 1978—Pub. L. 95–454 substituted “Establishment of performance appraisal systems” for “Performance-rating plans; establishment of” in section catchline and in text substituted provisions relating to the establishment of a performance appraisal system, for provisions relating to the establishment of performance-rating plans.

Statutory Notes and Related Subsidiaries

Effective Date

of 1978 AmendmentAmendment by Pub. L. 95–454 effective 90 days after Oct. 13, 1978, see section 907 of Pub. L. 95–454, set out as a note under section 1101 of this title. Annual Report to Congress on Unacceptable Performance in Whistleblower Protection Pub. L. 115–91, div. A, title X, § 1097(d)(3), Dec. 12, 2017, 131 Stat. 1620, provided that: “(A) Definitions.—In this paragraph, the terms ‘agency’ and ‘whistleblower’ have the meanings given the terms in section 4302(b)(3) of title 5, United States Code, as amended by paragraph (1). “(B) Report.—Each agency shall annually submit to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of the Senate, the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform [now Committee on Oversight and Accountability] of the House of Representatives, and each committee of Congress with jurisdiction over the agency a report that details—“(i) the number of performance appraisals, for the year covered by the report, that determined that an employee of the agency failed to meet the standards for protecting whistleblowers that were established under section 4302(b) of title 5, United States Code, as amended by paragraph (1); “(ii) the reasons for the determinations described in clause (i); and “(iii) each performance-based or corrective action taken by the agency in response to a determination under clause (i).”

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

5 U.S.C. § 4302

Title 5Government Organization and Employees

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73