DOJ: False Claims Act settlements and judgments exceed $6.8B in FY2025, record high
The U.S. Department of Justice reported that False Claims Act recoveries surpassed $6.8 billion for fiscal 2025, the largest single‑year total on record. Officials highlighted rising whistleblower filings and expanded enforcement across healthcare, government contracting and other sectors.
In a Jan. 16 press release, the U.S. Department of Justice announced that settlements and judgments under the False Claims Act exceeded $6.8 billion in fiscal year 2025, marking the highest single‑year recovery total in the statute's history. DOJ officials said the figure reflects sustained, broad federal priorities in civil enforcement and anti‑fraud efforts, with significant recoveries drawn from healthcare billing schemes, government contracting fraud, and other large‑scale misrepresentations that harmed federal programs. The release emphasized an uptick in qui tam filings by whistleblowers and increased investigative coordination across federal components, which officials credited with producing larger, more complex resolutions. DOJ framed the results as evidence of an aggressive civil enforcement posture focused on deterrence, restitution to federal coffers, and systemic compliance improvements. The announcement also signaled continued prioritization of health‑care and procurement integrity, and suggested that entities vulnerable to FCA exposure should anticipate sustained scrutiny, enhanced whistleblower incentives, and active civil litigation from the federal government.