

 
Federal Workforce Statistics Sources: 
OPM and OMB 
Updated June 28, 2022 
Congressional Research Service 
https://crsreports.congress.gov 
R43590 
 
  
 
Federal Workforce Statistics Sources: OPM and OMB 
 
Summary 
This report describes online tools, reports, and data compilations created by the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB) and the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) that contain 
statistics about federal employees and the federal workforce. 
The report also describes key characteristics of each resource and briefly discusses selected 
methodological differences, with the intention of facilitating the selection of appropriate data for 
specific purposes. This report is not intended to be a definitive list of all information on the 
federal workforce. It describes significant and recurring products that contain data often requested 
by Members of Congress or congressional staff. 
Congressional Research Service 
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Contents 
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1 
Comparing Methodologies: On-Board Personnel Versus Full-Time Equivalents ........................... 1 
Method 1: Full-Time Equivalent Employment (OMB) ............................................................. 1 
Method 2: On-Board Employment (OPM) ............................................................................... 2 
Office of Personnel Management .................................................................................................... 3 
FedScope ................................................................................................................................... 3 
Employment and Trends ........................................................................................................... 4 
Common Characteristics of Government .................................................................................. 5 
Sizing Up the Executive Branch of the Federal Workforce ...................................................... 5 
Office of Management and Budget ................................................................................................. 5 
Budget of the United States ....................................................................................................... 5 
Analytical Perspectives ....................................................................................................... 6 
Appendix ............................................................................................................................. 6 
Historical Tables ................................................................................................................. 7 
Congressional Budget Justifications ................................................................................................ 7 
Consideration of Sources ................................................................................................................. 7 
 
Tables 
Table 1. Measuring Full-Time Equivalent (FTE) Employment ...................................................... 2 
Table 2. Federal Civilian Employees On-Board Personnel, 2014-2021 .......................................... 4 
Table 3. Total Federal Employment ................................................................................................. 6 
  
Contacts 
Author Information .......................................................................................................................... 7 
 
Congressional Research Service 
 link to page 5 Federal Workforce Statistics Sources: OPM and OMB 
 
Introduction 
According to the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), the federal workforce is composed of 
an estimated 2.1 million civilian workers.1 Several federal agencies collect, compile, and publish 
statistics about this workforce. Sources may vary in their totals due to differences in the methods 
used to compile these statistics. 
For example, some sources rely on “head counts” of employees (OPM), some on total hours 
worked (such as the Office of Management and Budget [OMB]), some on surveys of employing 
agencies, and others on self-identification by workers surveyed in their homes.  
In addition, federal civilian employee databases may exclude particular departments, agencies, or 
branches of government. Some may also account for temporary or seasonal employees (such as 
those employed by the U.S. Census) depending on the time of year the statistics are generated. 
This report describes OMB and OPM sources and identifies key differences in methodologies, 
including data collection. Understanding these sources and their differences will facilitate 
selecting appropriate data for specific purposes. 
Comparing Methodologies: On-Board Personnel 
Versus Full-Time Equivalents2 
One example of a key methodological distinction is the difference between full-time equivalents 
(FTEs) and on-board personnel. The following two examples illustrate how the FTE and on-board 
methods can be used to derive different federal workforce totals.  
Method 1: Full-Time Equivalent Employment (OMB) 
The term full-time equivalent employment (FTE) is used to quantify employment as a function of 
hours worked rather than by the number of individual employees. One FTE is also known as one 
work year. The number of FTEs in an agency is calculated by determining the total number of 
regular straight time hours (i.e., not including overtime or holiday hours) worked by employees 
and dividing that figure by the number of compensable hours applicable to each fiscal year. One 
work year, or one FTE, is equivalent to 2,080 hours3 of work. 
Table 1 offers examples in which there is a difference between the actual number of employees 
and the number of FTEs working the same number of total hours. It also illustrates how 
measuring employment by hours can substantially change the perception of the number of 
employees it takes to accomplish the work. 
                                                 
1 U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM), September 2021, available at http://www.fedscope.opm.gov/. This 
estimate does not include the agencies and departments listed at http://www.fedscope.opm.gov/datadefn/
aehri_sdm.asp#cpdf3. 
2 This section was created with assistance from Barbara Schwemle, Analyst in American National Government. 
3 The figure of 2,080 hours in the work year is derived as follows: 8 hours per day multiplied by 10 days (in a 2-week 
pay period) equals 80 hours; 80 hours multiplied by 26 pay periods (in a year) equals 2,080 work hours. 
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Table 1. Measuring Full-Time Equivalent (FTE) Employment 
Normal 
Number of 
Hours 
Total 
Total 
Actual 
Work 
Worked Per 
Number of 
Compensable 
Employees 
Schedule 
Week 
Weeks 
Hours 
FTEsa 
1 
Full-time 
40 
52 
2,080 
1 
2 
Part-time 
20 
52 
2,080 
1 
5 
Full-time 
40 
52 
10,400 
5 
10 
Part-time 
20 
52 
10,400 
5 
17 
Part-time 
20 
52 
17,680 
8.5 
163 
Part-time 
20 
52 
168,520 
81.5 
Source: Congressional Research Service (CRS) calculations based on guidelines located in Section 85 of OMB 
Circular No. A-11. 
a.  FTE equals the total number of compensable hours worked divided by 2,080 hours.  
FTE employment numbers are used by OMB to manage employment in departments and 
agencies. The requirements for reporting FTE employment in the President’s Budget are 
prescribed in Section 85 of OMB Circular No. A-11 on “Estimating Employment Levels and the 
Employment Summary (Schedule Q).”4 
FTE data are published annually in OMB’s Budget of the United States Government under the 
individual department and agency accounts in the Appendix as well as in the Analytical 
Perspectives and Historical Tables volumes.5 
Method 2: On-Board Employment (OPM) 
OPM defines on-board employment as the number of employees in pay status at the end of the 
quarter. Data for on-board employment provide individual employee head counts in most 
departments and agencies as of a particular date, including full-time, part-time, and seasonal 
employees. For example, OPM’s Employment and Trends report6 and OPM’s FedScope database7 
contain on-board employment head counts. 
                                                 
4 U.S. Executive Office of the President (EOP), Office of Management and Budget (OMB), Preparation, Submission, 
and Execution of the Budget (Washington: GPO, April 2021), available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/
uploads/2018/06/a11.pdf. See Section 85.5 (c) for a detailed explanation of how FTEs are calculated. 
5 For example, see EOP, OMB, Budget of the United States Government, Analytical Perspectives Fiscal Year 2022 
(Washington: GPO, 2021), pp. 43-44, and EOP, OMB, Budget of the United States Government, Historical Tables 
Fiscal Year 2022 (Washington, GPO, 2021), Section 16 - Executive Branch Civilian Full-Time Equivalent 
Employment (available in Excel format only). 
6 OPM, Federal Civilian Workforce Statistics, Employment and Trends (Washington: OPM). The January 2009 to 
September 2013 reports are available at http://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/data-analysis-documentation/
federal-employment-reports/#url=Employment-Trends. 
7 OPM, FedScope database, at http://www.fedscope.opm.gov/. The database includes all executive branch agencies 
except the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Central Intelligence Agency, the Defense 
Intelligence Agency, foreign service personnel at the State Department, the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency, 
the National Security Agency, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the Office of the Vice President, the 
Postal Regulatory Commission, the Tennessee Valley Authority, the White House Office, and the U.S. Postal Service. 
It does not include the Foreign Service. For more information, see EHRI-SDM’s “Coverage” section at 
http://www.fedscope.opm.gov/datadefn/aehri_sdm.asp. 
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When calculating on-board personnel, each full-time, part-time, and seasonal worker is counted 
separately. When calculating FTEs, the collective hours those personnel work is counted. For 
example, an agency reporting 10 FTEs could conceivably report 20 on-board employees, 
depending on employees’ work schedules. 
In addition, depending on the specific date the employees are counted, an on-board headcount 
may result in wider variances in employment numbers than a count of FTEs. For example, the 
Census Bureau planned to hire 500,000 Census enumerators leading up to the 2020 Census,8 
many of whom were likely to be part-time employees. A count of federal on-board employees 
calculated during the employment of these Census enumerators will likely result in a substantially 
higher number than a count of federal FTEs during the same time period. The reason being that 
an FTE count examines hours worked rather than individual employee numbers.  
Office of Personnel Management 
OPM is an independent agency that functions as the central human resources department of the 
executive branch.9 In fulfilling its mission, OPM collects, maintains, and publishes data on a large 
portion of the federal civilian workforce.  
In FY2010, OPM established the Enterprise Human Resources Integration-Statistical Data Mart 
(EHRI-SDM). This automated system provides access to personnel data for 96% of nonpostal 
federal civilian executive branch employees. The database does have exclusions; for example, not 
all executive branch agencies submit their personnel data to OPM. These exclusions include some 
national security and intelligence agencies, much of the legislative and judicial branches, and the 
Postal Service.10 Even with these exclusions, the EHRI-SDM is widely regarded as the most 
comprehensive resource available on the size and scope of the federal workforce. 
More than 100 data elements are collected for each federal employee within the EHRI-SDM. 
These data are aggregated by OPM and published in the resources described below.  
FedScope 
FedScope is the OPM website that provides public access to the EHRI-SDM, covering the most 
recent five years of employment, accession, and separation data provided by approximately 120 
federal agencies.11 It is available at http://www.fedscope.opm.gov/. 
FedScope data are presented in five subject categories, called “cubes,” each covering a different 
subject and time span.12 The following are descriptions of the data cubes available through 
FedScope: 
  Employment. This set of cubes contains the total number of federal employees 
of the participating agencies, including employee age, gender, length of service, 
                                                 
8 U.S. Census Bureau, “2020 Census Nationwide Recruitment Campaign Gets Underway,” October 22, 2019, available 
at https://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2019/2020-recruitment-campaign-launch.html. 
9 P.L. 95-454, Title II, §201(a), 92 Stat. 1119, October 13, 1978. 
10 For a detailed analysis of USPS employment, see CRS Report RS22864, U.S. Postal Service Workforce Size and 
Employment Categories, FY1995-FY2014, by Kathryn A. Francis. 
11 For further information, see the “Coverage,” section at http://www.fedscope.opm.gov/datadefn/aehri_sdm.asp.  
12 For definitions of each variable, see OPM, “FedScope Data Definitions,” February 18, 2014, at 
http://www.fedscope.opm.gov/datadefn/DataDefinitions.pdf. 
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occupation, occupation category, pay grade, salary level, type of appointment, 
work schedule, agency, and location. Data are published quarterly (March, June, 
September, and December) for the most recent ten fiscal years. September data, 
which align with the end of the fiscal year, are available from 1998 to the present.  
  Accession. This set of cubes contains the number of people added to the federal 
civilian workforce each fiscal year. It includes data elements on employees hired 
from outside the government and those who transferred from one type of federal 
service category to another.13 The most recent 15 fiscal years of data are 
available. 
  Separation. This set of cubes contains the number of people who leave the 
federal civilian workforce each fiscal year. It captures data elements on 
employees who transferred to other agencies, voluntarily resigned, retired, 
experienced a reduction-in-force (RIF), were terminated, or died while employed. 
The most recent 15 years of data are available. 
  Employment Trends. This set of cubes displays the most recent five years of 
employment cube data together in one interface, facilitating workforce data 
comparisons and trend recognition.  
  Diversity. This set of cubes sorts data by an Ethnicity and Race Indicator. Data 
elements for 13 categories of racial and ethnic groups are available for the most 
recent eight years. September data, which align with the end of the fiscal year, 
are available from 2006 to the present.  
Table 2 provides some top-level data on total on-board employment available from FedScope. 
Table 2. Federal Civilian Employees On-Board Personnel, 2014-2021 
 
2014 
2015 
2016 
2017 
2018 
2019 
2020 
2021 
United States 
2,003,713 
2,029,293 
2,054,135  2,045,458  2,056,092  2,087,269  2,134,575  2,144,744 
U.S. Territories 
11,809 
12,311 
12,046 
12,276 
14,386 
14,246 
14,896 
15,288 
Foreign Countries 
29,260 
29,168 
29,938 
29,085 
29,360 
30,027 
30,200 
29,509 
Unspecified Areas 
925 
944 
919 
928 
964 
1,270 
1,435 
1,470 
Total 
2,045,707 
2,071,716 
2,097,038  2,087,747  2,100,802  2,132,812  2,181,106  2,191,011 
Source: Office of Personnel Management (OPM), FedScope, http://www.fedscope.opm.gov. 
Notes: Each total is an “on-board” count for September of the year noted. Current coverage does not include 
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, Central Intelligence Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency, 
foreign service personnel at the State Department, National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, National Security 
Agency, Office of the Director of National Intelligence, Office of the Vice President, Postal Regulatory 
Commission, Tennessee Valley Authority, U.S. Postal Service, White House Office, foreign nationals overseas, 
Public Health Service’s Commissioned Officer Corps, non-appropriated fund employees, selected legislative 
branch agencies, the judicial branch, or the military.  
Employment and Trends 
Employment and Trends is an occasional publication from OPM based on on-board employee 
data. It provides data on executive departments and independent agencies, including the 
Department of Defense (DOD) civilian employees, Executive Office of the President, legislative 
branch, and judicial branch. It presents selected data in detailed statistical tables and includes 
                                                 
13 The three service categories are competitive service, excepted service, and Senior Executive Service. 
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information by government branch, agency, and location. Introductory material in Employment 
and Trends explains the data presented, time lags in data releases, and caveats to consider when 
calculating workforce totals. The most recently released version of this resource is available at 
http://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/data-analysis-documentation/federal-employment-
reports/#url=Employment-Trends. 
Common Characteristics of Government 
Common Characteristics of Government is a publication that includes a brief outline of OPM’s 
federal employee databases and includes frequently requested data. The latest edition (FY2017) is 
available at https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/data-analysis-documentation/federal-
employment-reports/common-characteristics-of-the-government/ccog2017.pdf. 
Sizing Up the Executive Branch of the Federal Workforce 
Sizing Up the Executive Branch of the Federal Workforce is an OPM report that provides access 
to frequently requested data related to the executive branch. This report includes some 
information related to the size of the executive branch by month and year, types of employment, 
and other frequently requested data. The most recent report (FY2017) is available at 
https://www.opm.gov/policy-data-oversight/data-analysis-documentation/federal-employment-
reports/reports-publications/sizing-up-the-executive-branch-2016.pdf. 
Office of Management and Budget 
OMB is the largest component of the Executive Office of the President. OMB reports directly to 
the President, and it assists executive departments and agencies in implementing priorities and 
commitments of the President.14 OMB produces the Budget of the United States, which includes 
federal employee statistics created using the FTE counting method.  
Budget of the United States 
The Budget of the United States, sometimes referred to as the President’s Budget, is a four-
volume set of documents that includes detailed financial information on individual programs and 
appropriations accounts. Three volumes of the budget include information on direct civilian 
FTEs.15 Tables in the President’s Budget typically include actual FTE levels for prior fiscal years 
and estimates for the two most current fiscal years. The U.S. Government Publishing Office 
website posts budget volumes dating back to FY1996 at https://www.govinfo.gov/app/collection/
BUDGET/. 
Table 3 illustrates an example of some commonly requested federal employment data found 
within the President’s Budget. 
                                                 
14 More information on OMB’s mission and structure can be found at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/. 
15 EOP, OMB, Budget of the United States Government, Analytical Perspectives Fiscal Year 2022 (Washington: GPO, 
2021), pp. 43-44; U.S. Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget, Budget of the United 
States Government, Historical Tables Fiscal Year 2022 (Washington, GPO, 2021), Section 16 – Executive Branch 
Civilian Full-Time Equivalent Employment (available in Excel format only); and EOP, OMB, Budget of the United 
States Government Appendix Fiscal Year 2022 (Washington: GPO, 2021), pages on which “Employment Summary” 
table appears (i.e., Capitol Police on p. 18, Office of Congressional Workplace Rights on p. 19, Congressional Budget 
Office on p. 20, Architect of the Capital Programs on pp. 21-27). 
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Table 3. Total Federal Employment 
(as measured by ful -time equivalents) 
 
Change: 2022 to 2023 
2021  
2022 
2023 
Description 
Actual 
Estimate 
Estimate 
FTE 
Percent 
Executive Branch Civilian 
All Agencies, Excluding Postal Service 
2,183,067 
2,206,257 
2,288,566 
82,309 
3.6% 
Postal Servicea 
580,736 
566,431 
560,217 
-6,214 
-1.1% 
Subtotal, Executive Branch Civilian 
2,763,803 
2,772,688 
2,848,783 
76,095 
2.7% 
Executive Branch Uniformed Military 
Department of Defenseb 
1,406,795 
1,394,943 
1,371,769 
-23,174 
-1.7% 
Department of Homeland Security (USCG) 
41,493 
42,510 
42,967 
457 
1.1% 
Commissioned Corps (DOC, EPA, HHS) 
6,302 
6,345 
6,438 
93 
1.4% 
Subtotal, Uniformed Military 
1,454,590 
1,443,798 
1,421,174 
-22,624 
-1.6% 
Total, Executive Branch 
4,218,393 
4,216,486 
4,269,957 
53,471 
1.3% 
Legislative Branchc 
31,645 
34,516 
35,240 
724 
2.1% 
Judicial Branch 
33,041 
33,775 
34,556 
781 
2.3% 
TOTAL 
4,283,079 
4,284,777 
4,339,753 
54,976 
1.3% 
Source: President’s FY2023 Budget, Analytical Perspectives, Table 7-3, p. 83, https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/
BUDGET-2023-PER/pdf/BUDGET-2023-PER.pdf. 
a.  Includes the Postal Rate Commission. 
b.  Includes activated Guard and Reserve members on active duty. Does not include full-time support (Active 
Guard & Reserve (AGRSs)) paid from Reserve Component appropriations. 
c.  FTE data not available for the Senate (positions filled were used for actual year and extended at same level). 
The following volumes of the President’s Budget include information on federal employees. The 
current volumes can be accessed at https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/.16 
Analytical Perspectives 
The Analytical Perspectives volume typically includes information on the federal workforce, 
sometimes including information on occupations, trends, education level, age distribution, and 
other factors. The most current Analytical Perspectives volume of the President’s Budget is 
available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/analytical-perspectives/. 
Appendix 
The Appendix volume typically includes an estimate of individual agency FTEs based on the 
President’s proposal along with an estimate and actual FTE count for the prior two years. The 
most recent Appendix volume of the President’s Budget is available at 
http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/appendix. 
                                                 
16 The U.S. Government Publishing Office website posts complete volumes of the Budget of the United States 
Government back to FY1996. They can be accessed at https://www.govinfo.gov/app/collection/BUDGET/. 
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Historical Tables 
The Historical Tables volume of the President’s Budget includes historical data on topics such as 
budget, receipts, outlays, and deficits. This volume also typically includes historical employment 
counts. The most recent Historical Tables volume of the President’s Budget was released as 
multiple Excel files, and they are available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/historical-tables. 
Congressional Budget Justifications 
Congressional Budget Justifications are submitted to Congress annually by individual federal 
agencies and include each agency’s request for the number of FTEs to fund that year. In 2021, 
Congress passed legislation that, for the first time, required agencies to make their congressional 
budget justifications available to all Members of Congress and the public in a centralized 
location. The Congressional Budget Justification Transparency Act of 2021, P.L. 117-40, included 
requirements that annual agency budget justification materials be publically posted on 
USAspending.gov, subject to OMB-developed data standards, and provided to Congress within 
two weeks. Access to over 100 department and agency budget justification materials are now 
available on USASpending.gov, “Agency Profiles,” at https://www.usaspending.gov/agency. 
Congressional Budget Justifications can be another source for data on federal employment FTEs. 
Budget justifications often include data similar to what is found in the President’s Budget (one 
year of actual data followed by two years of estimates), but may also include FTE data at a more 
granular level such as a specific office within an agency.  
Consideration of Sources 
The resources described in this report contain data often requested by Members or congressional 
staff. The sources covered differ in methodology, such as how employees are counted (FTEs 
versus on-board employees), which agencies are included or excluded from counts, and the 
frequency of data collection. Users should be aware of these differences when using federal 
workforce statistics from these sources. 
 
 
Author Information 
 
Jared C. Nagel 
  Carol Wilson 
Senior Research Librarian 
Research Librarian 
    
    
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Federal Workforce Statistics Sources: OPM and OMB 
 
 
 
Disclaimer 
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Congressional Research Service  
R43590 · VERSION 18 · UPDATED 
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