Congressional committees have moved legislation that would rename the Department of Defense to the Department of War; three of four congressional committees have voted to advance the change and the legislation would require updates to roughly 7,600 statutory references.…

Breaking analysis of what happened and who is affected.
Congressional committees have moved legislation that would rename the Department of Defense to the Department of War; three of four congressional committees have voted to advance the change and the legislation would require updates to roughly 7,600 statutory references.…
Read full report →Segment ImpactDeep dive into how this impacts each market segment.
Three of four congressional committees have voted to officially rename the Department of Defense to the Department of War, requiring changes to nearly 7,600 references in U.S. law. The Pentagon estimates spending $51.5 million on implementation by end of FY2026, with costs potentially reaching…
Read full report →Action KitActionable checklists and implementation guidance.
Congressional action to rename the Department of Defense to the Department of War would require updating nearly 7,600 references in U.S. law. The Pentagon estimates $51.5 million in implementation costs by end of FY2026, with potentially much larger immediate costs.…
Read full report →Congressional committees have moved legislation that would rename the Department of Defense to the Department of War; three of four congressional committees have voted to advance the change and the legislation would require updates to roughly 7,600 statutory references. The Pentagon estimates implementation costs of $51.5 million by the end of FY2026 and warns that immediate mandatory replacement across all materials could push costs into the hundreds of millions. If the bill becomes law, government contractors will need to revise contract templates, proposals, regulations, directives, documentation, signage, and other DOD-related materials. Affected market segments include professional services, printing and publishing, signage and graphics, document management, legal and administrative services, IT and software development, facilities management, and related NAICS-coded firms. Contractors should begin monitoring the bill’s progress, inventorying DOD-facing deliverables, and preparing cost and schedule delta estimates for rapid implementation if required.
Affected segments include service and product providers that supply DOD-facing materials, documentation, publications, signage, IT systems, and facilities. Specific NAICS codes, agencies, contract vehicles, and compliance regimes identified in initial segmentation are listed below:
If you support DOD contracts or DOD-referenced deliverables, assume exposure until the legislation’s final status is confirmed.
A: Three of four congressional committees have voted to advance the change, but final enactment and the effective date are pending source review. Contractors should assume the proposal is still in legislative process until official confirmation.
A: The Pentagon estimates $51.5 million in implementation spending by the end of FY2026; it also warns that immediate mandated replacement across all materials could increase total costs into the hundreds of millions. Exact timing and phases of implementation are pending source review.
A: Begin a rapid inventory of all DOD-referenced contract templates, deliverables, documentation, signage, and systems; produce high-level cost and schedule deltas for updating artifacts; notify capture, proposal, compliance, facilities, and IT teams; and activate monitoring and pipeline-rescoring to detect solicitations or modifications tied to this legislation.
Who to notify: capture leads, proposal managers, contracts officers, compliance/security officers (FAR/DFARS/ITAR points of contact), facilities/ops managers, and finance teams for cost estimating. Begin with a focused briefing to capture, contracts, compliance, facilities, and IT leadership.
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