WASHINGTON, May 12 (Reuters) - The U.S. government
posted a $215 billion budget surplus in April, down $43 billion,
or 17%, from a $258 billion surplus in the year-earlier period,
due in part to bigger tax refunds this year and rising outlays,
including higher interest costs and military spending on the war
in Iran, the Treasury Department said on Tuesday.
Budget results in April typically show surpluses due to the
mid-month filing deadline for tax returns.
Individual refunds this year totaled $101 billion, up $14
billion, or 17%, from April 2025 because of new tax breaks on
tips, payments from the Social Security retirement program,
overtime premium pay and domestic car loan interest. Corporate
tax receipts for April also fell $8 billion, or 8%, from a year
earlier to $89 billion, while corporate refunds roughly doubled
to $6 billion.
The increase in refunds accounted for more than the $13 billion
drop last month in receipts, which were down 2% from last year
to $837 billion. Outlays in April rose $31 billion, or 5%, to
$622 billion.
Net customs receipts totaled $22.1 billion in April, about
even with March 2026 and below monthly peaks in the low $30
billion range late last year. But the figure was still up from
the $15.6 billion reported in April 2025, the first month of
Trump's "Liberation Day" emergency global tariffs that were
later annulled by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Those figures include $2 billion in customs refunds for April, a
number that is expected to grow in the budget results for May as
court-ordered refund payments from the Customs and Border
Protection agency began to flow on Tuesday. Some $166 billion in
tariff payments are subject to potential refunds.
The Treasury said the deficit for the first seven months of
fiscal 2026, which ends on September 30, fell $95 billion, or
9%, from the year-earlier period to $954 billion. Year-to-date
receipts were up $210 billion, or 7%, to $3.320 trillion, while
outlays were up $114 billion, or 3%, to $4.274 trillion.