It depends what you mean by “have money.” If you mean federal revenue , the U.S. government collected about $5.26 trillion in FY 2025, and about $3.66 trillion had been collected so far in FY 2026.

If you mean the government’s overall financial position, the latest Treasury financial report is the right kind of source to use, because “money” can include assets, liabilities, cash on hand, and debt rather than a single pile of cash. The federal government’s finances are therefore better described as a balance sheet than as one simple bank balance.

Quick scoop

  • Revenue collected: about $5.26 trillion in FY 2025.
  • FY 2026 so far: about $3.66 trillion collected.
  • Broader financial health: you’d need assets minus liabilities, not just revenue, to estimate what the government “has” overall.

What people usually mean

Most people asking this want one of three things:

  1. How much it takes in each year — that is revenue.
  1. How much it spends each year — that is outlays, which is different from revenue.
  1. How much it is worth overall — that requires the federal balance sheet and debt data, not just revenue.

Plain-English version

So the short answer is: the American government does not have one fixed amount of money sitting in an account. It collects trillions in revenue each year, but it also spends trillions and carries large liabilities, so the real answer depends on whether you mean cash flow, assets, or net financial position.

Would you like the answer in terms of cash on hand , annual revenue , or net worth?