Northern Mariana Islands
DOGE Federal Cuts Impact
Estimated 22 federal contract and grant terminations, totaling $69.4M in claimed savings — 0.1% of national total.
That's $1,466 per resident — ranked #2 nationally.
Est. Total Savings
$69.4M
Rank #55 nationally
Terminations
22
0.1% of national total
Per Capita
$1,466
Rank #2 nationally
FY2024 Federal Spending
$172.4M
Basis for distribution
The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) is estimated to have terminated 22 federal contracts and grants in Northern Mariana Islands, producing $69.4M in claimed savings — $1,466 per resident and 0.1% of all DOGE cuts nationally. On these numbers, Northern Mariana Islands ranks #55 by total estimated savings and #2 per capita, giving readers a concrete sense of how deeply the DOGE wind-down touches the state relative to the rest of the country.
The mix skews toward grants: 0 contract terminations account for $1.3M (1.9%), while 22 grant terminations account for $68.1M (98.1%). That split matters — contract terminations hit procurement-exposed businesses and installations, while grant terminations flow through universities, nonprofits, state agencies, and research institutions, so the two categories land on very different parts of Northern Mariana Islands's economy.
Context from FY2024 USASpending.gov puts the DOGE numbers in scale: Northern Mariana Islands received $121 in federal contracts and $638 in grants last fiscal year out of $172.4M in total federal spending. The estimated $69.4M in DOGE cuts represents a proportional share of that baseline — an upper-bound estimate, since DOGE's own API does not publish state-level attribution and actual terminations may be concentrated in specific counties, agencies, or programs rather than distributed evenly across the state.
A word on how to read these state figures. The Department of Government Efficiency publishes its savings claims as national totals at doge.gov, and its public API does not say which state any single terminated contract or grant belongs to. To put a number on each state, we distribute those national terminations in proportion to how much federal money the state actually drew during fiscal year 2024, using contract and grant obligations reported on USASpending.gov, the spending-transparency system the U.S. Treasury has operated since the DATA Act of 2014. Federal outlays exceeded 6,750 billion dollars in fiscal year 2024, and states with larger contract and grant bases absorb a larger modeled share of any wind-down. That makes every figure on this page an upper-bound estimate rather than a confirmed count: real terminations cluster in particular counties, agencies, and programs instead of spreading evenly. Our methodology lays out the exact distribution math and the source vintage so the estimate can be checked and reproduced.
Contract vs. Grant Terminations
Contract Terminations
0 contracts
$1.3M
Procurement contracts for goods and services
Grant Terminations
22 grants
$68.1M
Financial assistance to organizations, universities, institutions
FY2024 Federal Spending Context
The DOGE estimate for Northern Mariana Islands is based on its proportional share of FY2024 federal contracts and grants from USASpending.gov.
FY2024 Contracts
$121
FY2024 Grants
$638
FY2024 Total Federal
$172.4M
Top Federal Agencies in Northern Mariana Islands
Agencies with the largest federal spending in Northern Mariana Islands in FY2024 — likely most affected by DOGE terminations.
States With Similar DOGE Impact
States with estimated DOGE savings closest to Northern Mariana Islands.
| State | Est. Savings |
|---|---|
| American Samoa | $59.6M |
| U.S. Virgin Islands | $82.3M |
| Guam | $169.6M |
| Delaware | $300.2M |
| Wyoming | $353.1M |
Compare Northern Mariana Islands to another state side-by-side →
All DOGE Terminations
See every contract and grant termination by agency.
DOGE Overview →
Compare All States
See how Northern Mariana Islands compares to every other state.
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Northern Mariana Islands Federal Spending
Full FY2024 federal spending breakdown for Northern Mariana Islands.
View State Profile →
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.