Fed's real estate portfolio needs more than $25B of maintenance
The federal government’s real estate portfolio faces an 11‑figure maintenance backlog, with the General Services Administration reporting $25.8 billion in needed repairs across its holdings. That total includes 62 buildings requiring at least $100 million in repairs and two Washington, D.C., properties—the Agriculture Building and the Herbert Hoover Building—carrying more than $1 billion in deferred maintenance. The figure aligns with, but is about half of, the $50 billion estimate issued by the Public Buildings Reform Board in March.
The repair process is hampered by procurement rules: any project above $4 million requires congressional approval, and approval delays average about 435 days. In fiscal year 2025, more than $1 billion in proposed repairs weren’t performed because timely approvals were not secured, prompting questions about a 'speed‑first' approach and if a master plan exists for federal redevelopment. Congress has also diverted more than $15 billion from the Federal Buildings Fund to other uses.
To reduce maintenance liabilities, the GSA has begun selling aging federal office buildings in Southwest D.C. The agency’s occupancy survey found that none of the 22 agencies reached 50 percent space utilization last year, and overall unused space costs about $2 billion annually across the portfolio. The evolving policy landscape has bipartisan support to raise the prospectus threshold and avert further delays.





