GAO Report on Funding for Southern Border Security
GAO reports that DOD has obligated $2.64 billion for southern border operations since FY2025, using multiple funding strategies: $1.74 billion in realigned appropriations, $608 million in counter-drug transfers, $300 million in military construction funds, and $1 billion from the One Big Beautiful…
Cabrillo Club
Editorial Team · July 14, 2026 · 4 min read
Cabrillo Club Insights
GAO Report on Funding for Southern Border Security
Also in this intelligence package
TL;DR
GAO reports that DOD has obligated $2.64 billion for southern border operations since FY2025, using multiple funding strategies: $1.74 billion in realigned appropriations, $608 million in counter-drug transfers, $300 million in military construction funds, and $1 billion from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The report notes $305 million of those obligations are eligible for DHS (Department of Homeland Security) reimbursement. This significant reallocation of defense funds may redirect DOD resources away from other programs and change the pipeline of opportunities for contractors that support border security, military construction, logistics, surveillance, and facilities services. Contractors with active DOD or DHS work should evaluate contract scope, deliverables, and invoicing/reimbursement exposure now. Expect program offices and capture teams to re-score priorities and for new tasking or follow-on solicitations aligned to southern border operations to appear. Immediate action should focus on opportunity re‑scoring, contract risk review, and rapid capture posture adjustments.
Key Points
- What happened: GAO reports DOD obligated $2.64 billion for southern border operations since FY2025, comprised of $1.74 billion in realigned appropriations, $608 million in counter-drug transfers, $300 million in military construction funds, and $1 billion from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act; $305 million is eligible for DHS reimbursement.
- Who is affected: Market segments and contracting disciplines listed in the segmentation (Border Security, Military Construction, Defense, Facilities Support, Security Services, Surveillance Technology, Infrastructure, Logistics Support) and the NAICS codes and agencies in the segmentation.
- Timeline: Obligations occurred since FY2025.
- What contractors should do NOW: Immediately rescore active opportunity pipelines, review contract scopes and funding clauses for reprogramming risk and reimbursement entitlement, notify capture and program leads, and prepare rapid bid/no-bid decisions for border-related work.
Who Is Affected
- Affected market segments: Border Security; Military Construction; Defense; Facilities Support; Security Services; Surveillance Technology; Infrastructure; Logistics Support.
- Specific NAICS codes, agencies, and contract vehicles: 237990, 488190, 561210, 561621, 561612, 336411, 334511, 541330, 541715, 236220; DOD, DHS, CBP, Army Corps of Engineers, USACE; MATOC, LOGCAP, OASIS+, EAGLE II, ASTRO.
- Compliance surfaces to consider: DFARS (Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement), ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations), CMMC (Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification), FAR (Federal Acquisition Regulation) Part 31, Berry Amendment.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How much funding did DOD obligate for southern border operations?
A: GAO reports $2.64 billion obligated since FY2025, broken down as $1.74 billion in realigned appropriations, $608 million in counter-drug transfers, $300 million in military construction funds, and $1 billion from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The report identifies $305 million eligible for DHS reimbursement.
Q: Which agencies and contract vehicles are implicated?
A: The segmentation identifies DOD, DHS, CBP, and the Army Corps of Engineers / USACE as implicated; contract vehicles in scope include MATOC, LOGCAP, OASIS+, EAGLE II, and ASTRO. Pending source review for program-office-specific taskings and solicitations.
Q: What immediate risks and opportunities should contractors prioritize?
A: Prioritize rescoping active proposals and programs to assess funding continuity and reimbursement exposure; validate allowable cost and invoicing under current contract terms; accelerate capture decisions for border security tasking; and prepare cost/recovery analyses for potential DHS reimbursement. Specific contract impacts are pending source review.
Definitions
- GAO: Government Accountability Office — the audit and investigative arm that produced the report referenced in the Title and Summary.
- DOD: Department of Defense — the department that obligated the funds described in the report.
- One Big Beautiful Bill Act: Legislative funding source referenced in the GAO report; cited as contributing $1 billion to the obligations.
Intelligence Response
- Cabrillo Signals War Room — Already detected this event and delivered this briefing. Continuously monitors regulatory changes, contract vehicles, and policy shifts.
- Cabrillo Signals Match Engine — Automatically rescores opportunity pipelines when events like this shift the competitive landscape.
- Cabrillo Signals Intelligence Hub — Tracks affected agencies, NAICS codes, and contract vehicles. Saved searches alert when follow-on solicitations appear on SAM.gov (System for Award Management).
- Proposal Studio (Proposal OS) — AI-powered proposal automation with compliance matrices, win theme library, and bid/no-bid decision engine.
- Proposal Studio Workflow Tracker — 9-gate capture management with automated compliance routing and audit-ready documentation.
Which Cabrillo products to leverage
- Immediate: Cabrillo Signals War Room (alert provenance and initial analytics) and Cabrillo Signals Match Engine (rescore pipelines and reprioritize pursuits).
- Next: Cabrillo Signals Intelligence Hub (run saved searches for DOD/DHS/CBP taskings and MATOC/OASIS+/LOGCAP updates).
- Capture & Proposal: Proposal Studio (generate compliance matrices and rapid bid/no-bid output) and Proposal Studio Workflow Tracker (start the 9-gate capture workflow for any accelerated solicitations).
Who to notify in your organization
- Capture Manager — to re-evaluate pursuits and initiate bid/no-bid decisions.
- Program Manager / PMO — to review ongoing contract funding and delivery risk.
- Contracts / Legal — to assess funding clauses, reimbursement eligibility, and change orders.
- Finance — to model funding shifts and reimbursement cash flow impacts.
- Cybersecurity/Compliance Lead — to ensure continued adherence to DFARS/CMMC/ITAR/Berry Amendment where applicable.
First 48-hour response playbook
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- Hour 0–4: Confirm receipt of this brief with capture and program leads; run Cabrillo Signals Match Engine to rescore active opportunities; tag high-risk programs in the Intelligence Hub.
- Hour 4–12: Contracts and Finance perform contract‑level funding and reimbursement assessment for affected efforts; capture team completes rapid bid/no-bid output from Proposal Studio.
- Hour 12–24: Launch Proposal Studio Workflow Tracker gate 1–3 for any prioritized pursuits; set Intelligence Hub saved searches for DOD/DHS/CBP task notices and MATOC updates.
- Hour 24–48: Conduct executive briefing with capture, PMO, contracts, and finance to finalize pursuit priorities and mitigation steps; update opportunity pipelines and resource allocations based on Match Engine rescoring.
Relevant reading
- Winning Federal Contracts Guide (/insights/winning-federal-contracts)
- CMMC Compliance Guide (/insights/cmmc-compliance-guide)
- CUI (Controlled Unclassified Information)-Safe CRM Guide (/insights/cui-safe-crm-guide)
Stop missing federal opportunities
Signals matches SAM.gov opportunities to your NAICS codes, tracks regulatory changes, and alerts you before competitors.
Start Free Trialor try our free Intelligence Dashboard→

Cabrillo Club
Editorial Team
Cabrillo Club is a defense technology company building AI-powered tools for government contractors. Our editorial team combines deep expertise in CMMC compliance, federal acquisition, and secure AI infrastructure to produce actionable guidance for the defense industrial base.