The DOGE initiative has saved $214 billion in taxpayer funds, according to the agencyโs website.
Various federal government agencies have terminated and descoped 94 wasteful contracts over the past five days, the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) said in an Oct. 4 post on X.
<Contracts Update!
— Department of Government Efficiency (@DOGE) October 4, 2025
Over the last 5 days, agencies terminated and descoped 94 wasteful contracts with a ceiling value of $8.5B and savings of $546M, including a $533k Dept. of Commerce consulting contract for โediting support services to the Fisheries Resource Divisionโ and aโฆ pic.twitter.com/R9IKBvoWao
The terminated contracts had a ceiling value of $8.5 billion and saved $546 million, DOGE said.
This included a โ533k Dept. of Commerce consulting contract for โediting support services to the Fisheries Resource Divisionโ and a $61M HHS research contract for โsolutions to support innovation in pursuit of affordable and better healthcare,โโ according to the post.
This follows an earlier X post on Sept. 27 in which DOGE reported terminating and descoping 55 wasteful contracts with a ceiling value of $3.8 billion, saving $622 million.
Contracts Update!
— Department of Government Efficiency (@DOGE) September 27, 2025
Over the last 5 days, agencies terminated and descoped 55 wasteful contracts with a ceiling value of $3.8B and savings of $622M, including a $163k HHS education & training contract to โprovide information on the 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, and learnโฆ pic.twitter.com/OR2Rn2KJDu
According to the DOGE website, the initiative has saved $214 billion worth of taxpayer funds as of Oct. 4. This comes to roughly $1,329 in savings per taxpayer.
The savings were achieved through actions such as grant cancellations, contract/lease cancellations and renegotiations, asset sales, workforce reductions, and the deletion of fraud and improper payments, DOGE said.
Agencies that have seen the most savings include the Department of Health and Human Services, General Services Administration, Social Security Administration, Office of Personnel Management, and the Small Business Administration.
Some of what DOGE describes as the โstrangest, most bafflingโ uses of government funding uncovered by the agency include a $10 million grant for decolonizing the curriculum, a $2.8 million grant to address โhistoric and systemic racial inequitiesโ in STEM education, and a $1.5 million grant to advance โreproductive justiceโ and behavioral health among blacks and โbirthing people.โ
In an Oct. 3 X post, DOGE criticized an Oct. 1 NPR article that claimed DOGE had failed to deliver on its promises of boosting efficiency and cutting costs.
This @NPR article is full of inaccurate and misleading statements.
— Department of Government Efficiency (@DOGE) October 2, 2025
As an example, NPR claims:
โThe most recent contract termination on DOGE's website purports to show $4.3 million in savings from canceling a $4.4 million consulting contract for the Federal Aviationโฆ pic.twitter.com/G8wMWkjvlO
The article is โfull of inaccurate and misleading statements,โ the agency said in its post.
NPR said that a contract termination showing $4.3 million in savings was not actually terminated, and almost all the money had already been spent.
DOGE published the receipt for $4.3 million of de-obligated funds under the contract, which it said was the โvery definition of taxpayer savings.โ







