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Home ECONOMY

U.S. borrowing fiscal 2026 accelerates as debt interest heads toward $1 trillion

February 11, 2026
in ECONOMY
U.S. borrowing fiscal 2026 accelerates as debt interest heads toward $1 trillion

The opening months of fiscal 2026 have underscored the scale and persistence of America’s borrowing challenge. New estimates show the federal government has borrowed at a pace that places annual debt servicing costs firmly on track to exceed $1 trillion again, reinforcing concerns about the long-term sustainability of U.S. finances.

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According to the latest analysis from the Congressional Budget Office, the U.S. government ran a $696 billion deficit during the first four months of fiscal 2026, which began in October. That figure translates to an average of roughly $43.5 billion borrowed each week, a rate that highlights how deeply spending continues to exceed revenues.

January alone accounted for $94 billion of the shortfall. The data illustrates that U.S. borrowing fiscal 2026 remains structurally elevated even outside periods of acute economic stress.

A debt pile larger than the economy

America’s total national debt now exceeds $38.5 trillion. By comparison, U.S. gross domestic product stands at roughly $31 trillion, based on figures from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. The gap between the two has widened steadily over the past decade, accelerated by pandemic-era spending and higher interest rates.

Higher rates have become a defining feature of the current fiscal picture. Treasury data shows that by the end of January, the government had already paid $427 billion in interest expenses this fiscal year. If that trajectory continues, and with additional borrowing layered on top, annual interest payments are expected to reach or exceed $1 trillion.

That threshold is no longer theoretical. Interest costs totaled $1.13 trillion in fiscal 2024 and rose further to $1.22 trillion in fiscal 2025, marking a rapid escalation in the price of servicing existing obligations.

Warnings from budget watchdogs

Fiscal advocates argue the early fiscal 2026 numbers should be a wake-up call. Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, said the borrowing pace puts the country on track for yet another year with a deficit approaching $1.8 trillion.

She warned that the national debt is now roughly equivalent to the size of the entire U.S. economy, a level historically associated with reduced fiscal flexibility. Without bipartisan action, she said, high debt and large deficits risk becoming a permanent feature rather than a temporary phase.

Such warnings have become increasingly common as interest costs crowd out other priorities. Dollars devoted to servicing debt are dollars unavailable for defense, infrastructure, or social programs.

Why markets remain calm, for now

Despite the scale of the numbers, financial markets have not shown signs of panic. Treasury yields, often an early indicator of investor stress, remain relatively stable. Thirty-year Treasuries are trading near 4.8 percent, while ten-year yields hover around 4.2 percent, levels broadly consistent with much of last year.

If investors were seriously concerned about U.S. creditworthiness, yields would likely spike as lenders demanded higher compensation for perceived risk. Alternatively, sharply falling yields could signal that heavy bond issuance is overwhelming demand. Neither scenario has materialized.

Many economists argue that the United States retains unique advantages. As issuer of the world’s reserve currency, it has more tools available to manage a debt burden than most countries.

The long-term trade-offs

Some analysts point to mechanisms such as financial repression, modestly higher inflation, or renewed quantitative easing as potential ways the government could manage its obligations if pressure intensifies. Each option carries costs, particularly for consumers and savers, but they help explain why investors remain relatively confident.

Still, the long-term outlook is less comfortable. If economic growth fails to outpace borrowing, interest payments will consume a growing share of federal resources. That dynamic has been repeatedly flagged by Ray Dalio, founder of Bridgewater Associates.

Dalio has likened rising debt service costs to plaque in an artery, gradually constricting economic flexibility. His warning is not about an immediate crisis, but about the cumulative effect of persistent deficits and compounding interest.

For now, markets are signaling patience. But the early trajectory of U.S. borrowing fiscal 2026 suggests that without policy changes, the debate over America’s debt is set to intensify rather than fade.

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