Fastest-growing recipients
≈ computed · year over yearThe recipients whose federal obligations rose the most from FY2024 to FY2025. To keep the ranking meaningful it is limited to recipients with at least $50M in both years, so a tiny starting base can't manufacture a runaway percentage. Each row opens the recipient's page in the graph. ≈ computed
- 1Economic and Community Affairs, Alabama Department of$146.3M → $1.7B▲ 1076%
- 2Bccg a Joint Venture$287M → $3.1B▲ 989%
- 3Wright National Flood Insurance Company$323.5M → $2.9B▲ 810%
- 4West Virginia Dept of Human Services$156M → $907.6M▲ 482%
- 5Ohio Department of Children and Youth$157.1M → $845.3M▲ 438%
- 6American Bankers Insurance Company of Florida$170.6M → $851.7M▲ 399%
- 7Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency$289.3M → $1.3B▲ 361%
- 8Ohio Department of Development$326.2M → $1.5B▲ 351%
- 9Aevex Aerospace, LLC$152.3M → $676.9M▲ 344%
- 10Michigan Department of Labor and Economic Opportunity$500.4M → $2.1B▲ 321%
- 11Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace as$208.3M → $847.2M▲ 307%
- 12Dynetics, Inc.$167.9M → $678.7M▲ 304%
- 13Chicago Transit Authority$444.9M → $1.7B▲ 284%
- 14Ecc Constructors LLC$526.6M → $1.9B▲ 261%
- 15Textron Systems Corp$309.2M → $1.1B▲ 256%
- 16New Jersey Transit Corporation$301.1M → $1B▲ 246%
- 17Torrent Technologies, Inc.$258.6M → $885.3M▲ 242%
- 18Nan Inc$159.5M → $528.7M▲ 231%
- 19Nebraska Department of Water, Energy, and Environment$175M → $551.5M▲ 215%
- 20Fairwinds Technologies LLC$163.8M → $511.5M▲ 212%
- 21City of Detroit$168.8M → $513.3M▲ 204%
- 22▲ 193%
- 23Intuitive Research and Technology Corporation$192.5M → $519.2M▲ 170%
- 24Palantir Usg Inc$287.8M → $744.5M▲ 159%
- 25Department of Housing & Community Development$242.7M → $618.1M▲ 155%
- 26Fca US LLC$329.7M → $839M▲ 154%
- 27Arkansas Department of Human Services$269.2M → $666.6M▲ 148%
- 28Department of Transitional Assistan$1.3B → $3B▲ 136%
- 29Aerovironment, Inc$215.2M → $496.2M▲ 131%
- 30North Carolina Department of Public Safety$672.4M → $1.5B▲ 130%
- 31Dept of Energy & Environmental Protection$313.6M → $712.2M▲ 127%
- 32Illinois Environmental Protection Agency$632.3M → $1.4B▲ 122%
- 33Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority$276.8M → $610.4M▲ 121%
- 34National Railroad Passenger Corporation$7B → $15.2B▲ 115%
- 35North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality$620M → $1.2B▲ 97%
- 36City University of New York, the$645.8M → $1.3B▲ 94%
- 37Department of Transportation Connecticut$1.1B → $2.2B▲ 94%
- 38Florida Department of Commerce$1.4B → $2.6B▲ 93%
- 39Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection$549.7M → $1.1B▲ 92%
- 40Csi Aviation, Inc$350M → $665.6M▲ 90%
- 41Stonex Financial LTD$702.6M → $1.3B▲ 89%
- 42Marathon Petroleum Company LP$287.7M → $542.1M▲ 88%
- 43Dragados/Hawaiian Dredging/Orion JV$790.7M → $1.5B▲ 86%
- 44General Dynamics Corporation$19.2B → $35B▲ 82%
- 45Veterans Evaluation Services, Inc$1.1B → $2B▲ 79%
- 46Missouri Department of Natural R$275.3M → $488.6M▲ 77%
- 47RQ Construction, LLC$354.8M → $601.2M▲ 69%
- 48Government of the Virgin Islands$5.8B → $9.7B▲ 67%
- 49State of California Energy Commission$585.4M → $975.7M▲ 67%
- 50New Mexico Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management$290.5M → $480.8M▲ 65%
- 51Rhode Island DOT$527.8M → $871.5M▲ 65%
- 52National Center for Manufacturing Sciences Inc$591.7M → $975.7M▲ 65%
- 53Loyal Source Government Services LLC$546.4M → $899.8M▲ 65%
- 54Colorado State University$367.7M → $601.3M▲ 64%
- 55Blue Origin Washington, LLC$511.9M → $829M▲ 62%
- 56CDW Government LLC$305M → $491.1M▲ 61%
- 57Triwest Healthcare Alliance Corp$8.4B → $13.4B▲ 60%
- 58Rolls-Royce Corporation$860.3M → $1.3B▲ 57%
- 59California Department of Child Support Services$470.2M → $735.8M▲ 57%
- 60Medline Industries, LP$370.4M → $578.9M▲ 56%
- 61Bell Boeing Joint Project Office$871.4M → $1.4B▲ 55%
- 62Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources$307.7M → $473.6M▲ 54%
- 63Nebraska Department of Transportation$568M → $869.1M▲ 53%
- 64Countertrade Products, Inc.$321.9M → $492.3M▲ 53%
- 65Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium$309.8M → $472.7M▲ 53%
- 66QTC Medical Services Inc$1.9B → $2.9B▲ 49%
- 67Oregon Department of Transportation$724.3M → $1.1B▲ 48%
- 68Lockheed Martin Corporation$51B → $75.1B▲ 47%
- 69Salient Crgt, Inc.$557.1M → $816.1M▲ 46%
- 70General Atomics$355.5M → $518.6M▲ 46%
- 71State University of New York$325.5M → $472.4M▲ 45%
- 72Phillips 66 Company$442.9M → $640.3M▲ 45%
- 73Maximus Federal Services, Inc.$1.1B → $1.5B▲ 39%
- 74Supplycore LLC$591.7M → $818.3M▲ 38%
- 75Sierra Nevada Company, LLC$2B → $2.8B▲ 37%
- 76Transportation North Carolina Department$1.5B → $2B▲ 37%
- 77Textron Aviation Inc$344.2M → $468.3M▲ 36%
- 78Department of Transportation New York$2.5B → $3.3B▲ 35%
- 79▲ 34%
- 80Colorado Department of Transportation$815.9M → $1.1B▲ 34%
- 81Canadian Commercial Corporation$1.1B → $1.4B▲ 33%
- 82Mckesson Corporation$9B → $11.9B▲ 32%
- 83Alaska Department of Transportation & Public Facilities$967.6M → $1.3B▲ 31%
- 84Office of Emergency Services$4.8B → $6.2B▲ 31%
- 85RTX Corporation$23.4B → $30.5B▲ 30%
- 86Western Governors University$379.2M → $494.2M▲ 30%
- 87South Carolina Department of Transportation$1B → $1.4B▲ 30%
- 88Executive Office of the Commonwealth of Kentucky$1.1B → $1.4B▲ 29%
- 89Department of Environment & Conservation Tennessee$424.2M → $543.3M▲ 28%
- 90Iowa Department of Transportation$808.2M → $1B▲ 28%
- 91Corecivic, Inc.$465.4M → $591.7M▲ 27%
- 92Bell Textron Inc$1.2B → $1.5B▲ 27%
- 93State of Georgia Department of Public Health$384M → $485.3M▲ 26%
- 94Vertex Aerospace LLC$1.2B → $1.6B▲ 26%
- 95San Francisco Housing Authority$432.4M → $541.1M▲ 25%
- 96Maine Department of Transportation$462M → $576.5M▲ 25%
- 97Kansas Department of Health & Environment$3.7B → $4.6B▲ 25%
- 98Atlantic Diving Supply, Inc.$4.8B → $6B▲ 24%
- 99The Geo Group, Inc.$641.6M → $791.5M▲ 23%
- 100Defense Systems and Solutions$546.5M → $673.1M▲ 23%
FY2025 figures unless noted. This ranking is computed by us from USASpending source records and refreshed with each data load; it is a description of the money, never a judgment about any recipient.
🔎
Why the labels? The graph is only worth anything if the links are trusted. Facts taken straight from a federal filing are ✓ from source; anything we compute or infer (corporate parents, districts, competitors) is ≈ inferred and worded carefully, never asserted as fact.