DOGE claimed it saved $8 billion in one contract. It was actually $8 million

FILE — Elon Musk, who leads the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, answers questions from reporters in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Feb. 11, 2025. Employees from Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency are gaining access to vast amounts of information held by federal agencies, even as lawsuits try to stop them. (Eric Lee/The New York Times)
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The Department of Government Efficiency, the federal cost-cutting initiative championed by Elon Musk, published Monday a list of government contracts it has canceled, together amounting to about $16 billion in savings itemized on a new “wall of receipts” on its website.

Almost half of those line-item savings could be attributed to a single $8 billion contract for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency. But the DOGE list vastly overstated the actual value of that contract. A closer scrutiny of a federal database shows that a recent version of the contract was for $8 million, not $8 billion. A larger total savings number published on the site, $55 billion, lacked specific documentation.

The contract, with a company called D&G Support Services, was to provide “program and technical support services” for the Office of Diversity and Civil Rights at ICE. The Trump administration has been purging diversity programs from the federal government.

By examining past versions of the contract listed on the Federal Procurement Data System, The Upshot determined that the federal award, approved in September 2022, had initially listed a total value of $8 billion. But on Jan. 22 of this year, that figure was updated to $8 million. According to the database, the contract was terminated about a week later. (For context, $8 billion is nearly the size of the entire budget of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.)

It’s possible that DOGE or someone else in the Trump administration can claim credit for fixing the error in the contracting database, given that the value was downgraded to $8 million two days after President Donald Trump took office. But it is also clear that the government was not spending $8 billion on the contract. In the 2 1/2 years since it was signed, $2.5 million had been spent; the contract appeared set to expire in 2027.

The DOGE website initially included a screenshot from the federal contracting database showing that the contract’s value was $8 million, even as the DOGE site listed $8 billion in savings. On Tuesday night, around the time this article was published, DOGE removed the screenshot that showed the mismatch but continued to claim $8 billion in savings. It added a link to the original, incorrect version of the listing showing an $8 billion value.