How Much Coronavirus Funding Has Gone to Your State? | Peter G. Peterson Foundation

How Much Coronavirus Funding Has Gone to Your State?

To respond to the devastating health and economic effects of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, federal policymakers have enacted several bills, which include significant funding for new and existing programs to aid individuals, businesses and governments across the country.

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Here's How Much Funding
Has Received:

State By State Funding for Major Coronavirus Programs

Policymakers, media members and the public can assess the reach of federal coronavirus aid by using the table below to compare distributions per capita, overall and by program.

Spending to Date for 22 Major COVID-19 Programs

All totals are in millions of dollars except Total Per Capita

StateTotalTotal Per CapitaEconomic Impact PaymentsFederal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation Pandemic Unemployment Assistance Other Emergency Unemployment FundingPaycheck Protection ProgramProvider Relief FundCoronavirus Relief FundCoronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery FundHHS COVID-19 AppropriationsFEMA Disaster Relief FundGovernor's Emergency Education Relief FundElementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief FundHigher Education Emergency Relief FundInfrastructure GrantsRental AssistanceHomeowner Assistance FundRestaurant Revitalization FundShuttered Venue Operators GrantEmergency Injury Disaster Loan AdvancesEmergency Injury Disaster LoansMedicare Accelerated and Advance Payments
Alabama$46,772$9,539$12,642$3,057$722$349$26$9,583$1,447$1,901$3,860$2,246$415$183$3,138$1,195$169$585$126$154$76$372$3,188$1,339
Alaska$11,791$16,119$1,791$713$149$74$17$2,058$251$1,250$1,250$1,652$161$23$557$65$221$352$50$95$15$41$797$211
Arizona$74,339$10,213$17,704$8,625$752$2,707$79$12,555$1,631$2,822$6,827$3,943$1,442$240$4,011$1,374$680$882$197$294$273$413$5,122$1,766
Arkansas$28,823$9,551$7,932$2,144$194$456$42$5,079$1,059$1,250$2,584$1,460$250$103$1,941$701$98$360$63$93$53$171$1,689$1,098
California$555,068$14,048$88,511$87,239$12,104$32,096$2,986$104,551$11,051$15,321$42,915$15,812$13,298$1,039$23,437$9,700$9,805$4,676$1,055$5,710$2,153$3,704$59,063$8,840
Colorado$63,597$11,043$13,350$4,642$1,516$2,574$353$15,140$1,595$2,233$5,764$2,161$1,821$140$1,807$955$989$690$175$481$241$371$5,237$1,361
Connecticut$44,638$12,520$7,888$5,106$1,138$659$362$9,959$1,814$1,382$4,369$1,507$780$85$1,710$725$1,274$423$123$301$148$228$3,507$1,151
Delaware$12,388$12,721$2,393$764$177$125$35$2,277$447$1,250$1,268$500$203$25$637$204$204$352$50$68$32$67$815$492
District of Columbia$15,683$22,222$1,275$1,369$386$177$64$3,331$365$495$2,312$834$578$21$600$235$1,180$352$50$401$88$85$1,103$381
Florida$238,556$11,107$54,484$17,027$4,991$3,086$601$51,288$5,140$8,328$15,923$8,205$4,008$752$10,947$4,299$2,165$2,582$676$1,345$878$2,736$33,136$5,960
Georgia$121,417$11,436$25,817$12,137$2,017$2,929$464$25,745$3,171$4,117$8,364$5,365$1,648$359$6,602$2,319$906$1,272$354$620$239$1,523$12,408$3,042
Hawaii$21,152$14,939$3,576$2,589$953$730$103$3,842$404$1,250$2,160$646$681$39$640$208$397$352$50$414$141$115$1,577$285
Idaho$18,702$10,465$4,778$715$97$128$25$3,517$435$1,250$1,673$903$171$69$684$380$1,581$352$72$48$55$77$1,126$566
Illinois$161,984$12,783$29,636$16,941$4,123$4,547$365$38,178$5,827$4,914$14,058$5,443$2,583$374$7,879$2,459$2,339$1,495$387$1,419$559$1,919$12,179$4,359
Indiana$67,125$9,971$17,329$6,299$708$1,367$337$14,000$2,346$2,610$5,660$2,952$833$278$3,099$1,343$341$802$168$242$138$386$3,390$2,496
Iowa$31,874$10,103$8,118$2,082$382$342$99$8,098$1,241$1,250$2,654$1,416$460$102$1,192$693$140$376$50$122$92$122$1,821$1,022
Kansas$29,305$10,059$7,246$1,530$278$205$167$7,416$1,117$1,250$2,577$1,344$430$103$1,286$620$150$353$57$109$100$130$1,923$916
Kentucky$43,856$9,816$11,951$4,334$512$121$174$7,845$1,858$1,732$3,771$2,260$401$164$3,123$883$272$532$85$172$91$195$2,179$1,200
Louisiana$59,604$12,821$11,741$6,107$567$1,005$98$12,415$2,126$1,803$4,819$2,406$2,421$208$4,054$1,082$303$552$147$394$174$558$5,100$1,525
Maine$16,956$12,614$3,629$1,447$249$279$46$3,262$680$1,250$1,499$706$265$43$638$228$126$352$50$136$51$68$918$1,034
Maryland$73,658$12,184$13,451$7,793$1,086$3,886$208$15,160$2,363$2,344$6,040$2,515$1,997$159$3,029$1,099$1,861$719$249$562$216$475$6,009$2,439
Massachusetts$103,420$15,005$14,907$14,321$5,753$5,880$585$21,212$3,889$2,673$8,674$3,115$2,321$145$2,861$1,578$2,416$819$179$993$398$451$6,038$4,211
Michigan$130,276$13,045$25,250$21,953$2,923$6,005$449$24,458$3,831$3,873$10,947$4,366$2,575$341$5,769$1,989$787$1,184$243$784$354$663$7,640$3,891
Minnesota$64,918$11,511$13,755$6,830$1,986$1,010$453$16,640$2,036$2,187$4,966$2,291$842$166$2,050$1,021$867$672$129$525$267$349$3,811$2,063
Mississippi$32,459$10,907$7,832$2,887$256$409$78$5,550$1,161$1,250$2,754$1,753$712$129$2,523$876$87$356$72$77$19$283$2,212$1,184
Missouri$60,524$9,861$15,726$3,931$527$542$97$13,801$2,376$2,380$5,158$2,665$822$238$3,038$1,207$537$731$138$284$228$338$3,613$2,147
Montana$12,911$12,081$2,843$788$88$165$27$2,604$463$1,250$1,250$764$139$42$593$189$61$352$50$57$21$65$852$249
Nebraska$20,927$10,818$4,954$815$63$82$43$5,380$897$1,250$1,703$1,019$332$65$854$398$87$352$50$88$81$99$1,493$823
Nevada$40,021$12,993$7,863$6,113$1,443$1,345$259$6,974$920$1,250$3,780$1,339$719$89$1,667$393$381$373$121$268$249$285$3,575$617
New Hampshire$15,929$11,715$3,342$1,148$79$183$52$3,720$527$1,250$1,457$547$311$31$544$299$69$352$50$91$40$75$1,073$689
New Jersey$129,074$14,532$19,884$15,606$4,157$6,045$565$25,773$4,719$3,444$9,840$3,570$3,120$267$4,308$1,756$6,343$1,055$326$924$245$835$13,010$3,282
New Mexico$22,666$10,810$5,313$2,205$547$476$84$3,406$610$1,250$2,456$1,288$455$77$1,524$404$181$352$56$169$62$102$1,290$358
New York$334,275$17,183$46,025$51,056$10,255$17,746$1,094$61,435$13,840$7,543$23,460$9,336$8,339$811$14,035$5,060$14,170$2,297$539$3,667$2,017$2,254$32,313$6,984
North Carolina$99,216$9,460$25,897$8,191$1,892$1,440$135$17,902$2,869$4,067$8,850$4,958$1,462$352$5,601$2,197$621$1,259$273$647$285$649$7,037$2,632
North Dakota$11,319$14,853$1,900$545$145$72$16$2,889$362$1,250$1,250$549$232$20$475$146$41$352$50$26$36$39$745$180
Ohio$128,518$10,995$30,131$12,267$1,825$5,053$406$27,571$4,715$4,533$10,658$4,744$1,686$508$6,956$2,196$1,084$1,389$281$587$387$667$7,040$3,835
Oklahoma$40,723$10,291$10,108$2,538$671$263$198$8,388$1,360$1,534$3,193$3,468$394$138$2,321$844$142$473$87$111$90$212$2,900$1,290
Oregon$47,707$11,311$10,433$5,219$1,351$1,061$248$10,108$1,028$1,635$4,153$1,773$961$116$1,742$762$849$504$91$531$210$252$3,468$1,210
Pennsylvania$165,527$12,930$31,893$24,436$3,914$10,941$683$30,701$5,875$4,964$13,450$4,898$2,661$499$7,749$2,567$2,596$1,518$350$949$425$788$8,540$5,128
Rhode Island$16,169$15,263$2,628$1,934$287$671$97$2,906$432$1,250$1,668$688$645$31$646$348$134$352$50$106$33$73$905$284
South Carolina$48,264$9,374$13,143$3,739$686$547$141$8,850$1,323$1,996$4,125$2,199$783$171$3,270$1,027$158$620$145$217$85$351$3,523$1,164
South Dakota$11,564$13,071$2,347$232$12$21$16$2,730$631$1,250$1,250$709$40$31$593$157$46$352$50$26$16$50$791$215
Tennessee$67,642$9,905$17,763$4,835$458$674$164$13,523$3,519$2,648$6,007$2,976$875$265$3,857$1,364$358$818$168$295$362$476$4,173$2,063
Texas$321,682$11,094$69,693$24,910$6,801$5,728$937$63,590$8,626$11,243$26,254$12,640$17,973$883$19,243$5,997$2,622$3,488$842$1,675$1,117$2,514$28,359$6,547
Utah$28,768$8,973$7,964$1,056$202$86$48$7,098$695$1,250$2,477$1,405$333$104$958$928$434$386$66$117$163$135$2,257$607
Vermont$10,162$16,285$1,643$886$165$192$30$1,765$262$1,250$1,250$421$410$17$443$124$65$352$50$77$30$43$502$185
Virginia$84,770$9,931$19,671$7,994$1,091$1,991$327$18,160$1,895$3,310$7,204$3,036$1,285$220$3,289$1,661$1,479$1,020$258$653$212$546$6,945$2,523
Washington$88,264$11,591$17,898$9,484$2,668$2,531$595$18,352$3,128$2,953$7,120$3,889$1,884$200$2,896$1,265$2,642$914$173$921$310$455$6,251$1,735
West Virginia$18,155$10,130$4,849$1,334$192$168$75$2,613$752$1,250$2,034$1,024$286$49$1,188$371$83$352$50$41$46$57$687$654
Wisconsin$57,559$9,886$14,917$3,844$545$350$193$14,300$2,180$2,258$4,856$2,432$639$244$2,403$1,064$442$693$93$379$229$324$3,361$1,813
Wyoming$8,432$14,569$1,486$248$48$26$6$1,656$215$1,250$1,250$380$95$18$472$83$31$352$50$19$37$33$523$152
U.S. Territories$41,047$5,521$7,291$505$1,146$18$3,350$287$2,505$6,160$2,258$1,119$300$4,638$1,737$341$705$106$92$105$203$2,524$137

Why Do States Receive Different Amounts of Federal COVID Aid?

It’s not surprising that the most populated states often receive the most funding within each COVID relief program.However, the amount of funding per capita can vary state by state for many reasons. Each COVID relief program includes different criteria for how money is allocated. For example, variations in direct aid to state and local government entities under the CARES Act and American Rescue Plan, are shown below.

The Amount of COVID Aid Provided Directly to Governments on a Per-Capita Basis Varies by Act

Allocation of Direct COVID-19 Aid to Governments per Capita, by State

SOURCE: Department of the Treasury
NOTE: Direct aid to governments refers to COVID-19 relief provided directly to non-federal levels of government.

How Have State and Local Governments Used COVID Relief Funds So Far?

The federal government has disbursed most of the authorized pandemic relief for state and local governments so far. See how that aid has been used to support state and local budgets, school districts, public health efforts, small businesses, and infrastructure needs, among other things.

How Have States Used Their Direct COVID Relief Funds?

Here are some notable trends showing how lower levels of government have spent some of their relief funds.

Read More

How Much Money Is Left in COVID-19 Relief Programs?

Here is a breakdown of the remaining funds for COVID-19 relief programs.

Read More

American Rescue Plan Projected to Boost the Economy by 73¢ For Every Dollar Spent

Although the costliest measures are anticipated to contribute the most to the economy, they are not necessarily expected to provide the most bang for the buck.

Read More

How Much COVID Relief is Left to be Disbursed?

The federal government distributes COVID relief funding to taxpayers, the workforce, business owners, government entities and healthcare providers on a rolling basis. The table below gives a sense for the funding that has been disbursed so far for major programs – and some are much further along than others in this respect.

Percentage of Funds Disbursed from Major COVID-19 Programs

Amount Disbursed To Date (Billions)Total Amount Authorized (Billions)Amount Disbursed To Date as a Percent of Total Amount Authorized
Economic Impact Payments$813$86694%
Paycheck Protection Program$803$81099%
Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation $441$441100%
Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Fund$252$36270%
Economic Injury Disaster Loans$330$34795%
Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund$190$190100%
Provider Relief Fund$158$17889%
Pandemic Unemployment Assistance $131$14789%
Coronavirus Relief Fund$150$150100%
HHS COVID-19 Appropriations$151$151100%
Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation $85$85100%
Medicare Accelerated and Advance Payments$100$100100%
FEMA Disaster Relief Fund$89$9198%
Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund$75$7699%
Infrastructure Grants$70$70100%
Economic Injury Disaster Loan Advances$27$5550%
Rental Assistance$38$4781%
Restaurant Revitalization Fund$29$29100%
Shuttered Venue Operators Grant$14$1686%
Other Emergency Unemployment Funding$15$15100%
Governor's Emergency Education Relief Fund$11$11100%
Homeowner Assistance Fund$1$107%
Total$3,971$4,24694%

Below is a description of the methodology used for compiling and collecting state-level data for certain programs that provide federal funding in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. This appendix includes a brief definition of each program, an indication of where the data came from, when the data was collected, and any data caveats.

Paycheck Protection Program

The Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) provides federally backed loans in an effort to incentivize small businesses to maintain their payroll during the crisis; those loans will be forgiven if used for certain expenses such as payroll, rent, or utilities.

The data comes from the Small Business Association (SBA), the agency that administers the program, and is updated through May 31, 2021.

Emergency Injury Disaster Loans and Loan Advances

Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL) are small, low-interest loans with options for principal and interest deferment. EIDLs are designed to provide economic relief to businesses that are currently experiencing a temporary loss of revenue; the loans can be used to cover working capital and normal operating expenses such as payroll costs, pay for sick leave, and debt-service costs.

Economic Injury Disaster Loan Advances, also referred to as EIDL grants, provide up to $10,000 of economic relief to qualified small businesses and agricultural businesses that faced economic injury because of the pandemic. Unlike the loans, EIDL advances do not have to be repaid. This category also includes the targeted EIDL advances, which provides $35 billion worth of grants to businesses in low-income communities. The SBA is no longer accepting EIDL loan and advance applications as of January 1, 2022.

Restaurant Revitalization Fund

This fund provides up to $29 billion in emergency assistance for eligible restaurants, bars, and other qualifying businesses impacted by COVID-19. It will provide restaurants with funding equal to their pandemic-related revenue loss up to $10 million per business and no more than $5 million per physical location. Recipients are not required to repay the funding as long as funds are used for eligible uses no later than March 11, 2023. The funds are made available through the SBA and have been fully disbursed.

Shuttered Venue Operators Grant

This grant provides about $16 billion of emergency assistance to eligible venues affected by COVID-19. Eligible applicants may qualify for grants equal to 45% of their gross earned revenue, with the maximum amount available for a single grant award of $10 million. $2 billion is reserved for eligible applications with up to 50 full-time employees. The SBA has provided data for the program through January 24, 2022.

Economic Impact Payments

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has issued direct payments, often referred to as stimulus checks, to help Americans mitigate the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. The first round of such payments totaled $1,200 per person ($2,400 for married couples) plus $500 per qualified child. As of December 31, the IRS has disbursed about $271 billion in those first-round Economic Impact Payments; the Congressional Budget Office estimates those payments will cost a total of $292 billion through 2021. Stimulus payments sent to Americans living abroad are included in the U.S. Territories category.

The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 included a second round of stimulus payments, totaling $600 per person plus $600 per qualified child; CBO expects those payments will costs $164 billion. The IRS has provided state-level data, as of early February 2021, for $141 billion of those payments. Stimulus checks for which a state is not available, which includes payments made to addresses in Puerto Rico, are included in the U.S. territories category.

The American Rescue Plan included a third round of such payments, totaling $1,400 per person plus $1,400 per eligible child. While the IRS has disbursed about $400 billion of those payments, the agency has provided state-level data, as of early June 2021, for $390 billion of the payments. Stimulus checks for which a state is not available, which includes payments made to addresses in Puerto Rico, are included in the U.S. territories category. Overall, CBO expects the third round of payments will cost $411 billion.

Unemployment Compensation

Federal legislation enacted in response to the COVID-19 pandemic extended unemployment benefits through various programs, all of which have since expired. The total expected cost of each program comes from the Congressional Budget Office and the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. and accounts for the states ending certain federal unemployment programs early. The expanded unemployment benefits expired September 5, 2021. Below is the methodology used to collect data on each program.

  • Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation
    The Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation program initially increased unemployment benefits by $600 per week through July 31, 2020. The program was reauthorized, although at a lower rate, and increased such benefits by $300 per week. .
    Executive action, issued by President Trump on August 8, 2020, briefly continued some of those benefits but at a lower rate. Those funds, referred to as the lost wages assistance program, were provided through the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) Disaster Relief Fund and are included in the corresponding section below.

  • Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation
    The Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation program provided up to 13 additional weeks of unemployment benefits to people who exhausted their regular unemployment benefits.

  • Pandemic Unemployment Assistance
    The Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program expanded eligibility for unemployment benefits to people who were not usually eligible for regular unemployment compensation — such as self-employed workers, independent contractors, and individuals without sufficient work history. The program provided benefits for up to 50 weeks of unemployment.

  • Other Emergency Unemployment Funding
    The federal government has provided support for other programs such as emergency relief for governments and non-profits, funding for the first week of regular unemployment compensation, and grants to state unemployment programs.

Provider Relief Fund

The $178 billion Provider Relief Fund, administered by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), distributes direct payments to hospitals and other healthcare providers on the front lines of the coronavirus response. As of January 25, 2022, HHS has committed $158 billion of that funding. However, state-level disbursements for the program are only made public once healthcare providers have attested to receiving one or more payments and have agreed to the program’s terms and conditions, of which they have 90 days to do so. Such disbursements reflect about $122 billion of program spending.

Coronavirus Relief Fund

The Coronavirus Relief Fund consists of $150 billion in direct federal aid to governments in states, territories, and tribal areas to cover expenditures incurred due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Data for states and territories is from the Department of the Treasury; those funds sum to $142 billion and have been fully disbursed. That state-level data does not match the total amount disbursed to date, which includes $8 billion to tribal governments, the majority of which has also been disbursed.

Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Fund

This fund provides $362 billion of direct federal aid to state, local, tribal, and territorial governments to cover expenditures incurred and revenues lost due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It includes the $10 billion allocated for the Capital Projects Fund for such governments to cover the costs of capital projects like broadband infrastructure.
While only $252 billion of such funding has been disbursed through January 21, the state-level data reflect $330 billion allocated to governments through the fund (which does not include the $20 billion allocated to tribal governments, the $10 billion Capital Projects Fund, and the $2 billion Local and Tribal Consistency Fund).

Medicare Accelerated and Advance Payments

Through this program, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) accelerated Medicare payments to hospitals and advanced payments to physicians and other healthcare providers to mitigate cash flow disruptions during the public health emergency. Those payments are loans that must be paid back and are financed from the Hospital Insurance (Part A) and Supplementary Medical Insurance (Part B) trust funds. To date, a total of $100 billion in such loans have been disbursed. As of October 8, CMS is no longer accepting applications for accelerated or advanced payments as they relate to the COVID-19 pandemic.

HHS COVID-19 Appropriations

These appropriations consist of the awards made by HHS using emergency supplemental funding provided in the COVID-19 relief bills that have been enacted to date. The appropriations are used for a variety of reasons, such as helping state and local public health departments respond to the pandemic, the purchase and development of COVID-19 testing, and child care block grants. The amount authorized for such appropriations is currently set as equal to the amount disbursed to date as the total amount authorized is not readily available.

The state-level distribution estimate for U.S. Territories includes awards made to foreign addresses those marked as ‘Other’. Data reflects spending disbursed as of January 25, 2021.

FEMA Disaster Relief Fund

Managed by the FEMA the Disaster Relief Fund is the primary source of funding for the federal government’s domestic general disaster relief programs. To supplement the amount appropriated to the fund before the onset of the pandemic, the CARES Act authorized an additional $45 billion to the program to cover costs that were incurred to reduce or eliminate the threat of COVID-19.

State-level distribution of such data comes from FEMA's monthly report to Congress on the activities and spending under the fund and reflects spending as of December 31, 2021. However, that data also includes funding disbursed for the lost wages assistance program as FEMA’s report combines the funding provided under each program.

Eductional Support

The Education Stabilization Fund was created to provide support to states, schools, and institutes of higher education in response to coronavirus. That fund consists of a number of programs, the largest of which are the Governor’s Emergency Education Relief Fund, Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund, and Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund. This analysis uses data from the Department of Education and is updated through July 31, 2021.

Governor’s Emergency Education Relief (GEER) Fund

The GEER provides flexible emergency block grants to governors to help them meet the current needs of students, schools (including charter schools and non-public schools), postsecondary institutions, and other education-related organizations in their state. This category includes emergency assistance for non-public schools. The state-level distributions reflect the total amount authorized for each state.

Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) Fund

ESSER grants are provided to state educational agencies for the purpose of providing local educational agencies (LEAs), including charter schools that are LEAs, with emergency relief funds to address the impact that COVID-19 is having on elementary and secondary schools.

Higher Education Emergency Relief (HEER) Fund

HEER funds provide emergency relief to institutions and students in higher education. Congress created several different formula and allocations within the fund, including support for students, college institutions, historically black colleges and universities, tribally controlled colleges and universities, minority serving institutions, and more. The state-level distributions reflect the total amount authorized for each state but does not include the $396 million of grant funds for students at for-profit institutions.

Infrastructure Grants

Policymakers provided $70 billion in infrastructure grants to transit agencies to help them prevent, prepare for, and respond to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Federal Transit Administration, which is overseeing such grants, will support capital, operating, and other expenses. Those grants include nearly funding for urbanized areas, rural areas, public transportation on Indian reservations, and more.

State-level disbursement data for the infrastructure grants do not include allocations to Indian Reservations.

Rental Assistance

The Emergency Rental Assistance program makes available $47 billion to assist households that are unable to pay rent and utilities due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The funds are provided directly to States, U.S. Territories, local governments, and Indian tribes. Grantees use the funds to assist eligible households through existing or newly created rental assistance programs. Eligible households may receive up to 12 months of assistance, plus an additional 3 months if the grantee determines the extra months are needed to ensure housing stability and grantee funds are available.

Funding for the program is available through the U.S. Department of the Treasury. The state-level distributions reflect the full amount authorized to each state; as of January 21, 2021, only $38 billion of such funding has been disbursed.

Homeowner Assistance Fund

The Homeowner Assistance Fund (HAF) provides up to $10 billion to prevent mortgage delinquencies and defaults, foreclosures, loss of utilities or home energy services, and displacement of homeowners. Funds from the HAF may be used for assistance with mortgage payments, homeowner’s insurance, utility payments, and other specified purposes. The law prioritizes funds for homeowners who have experienced the greatest hardships, leveraging local and national income indicators to maximize the impact.

The state-level disbursement is available through the U.S. Department of the Treasury and reflects the full amount authorized to each state; as of May 13, only $742 million of such funding has been disbursed.

U.S. Territories

U.S. Territories includes American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico, Northern Mariana Islands, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Included in this category is any U.S. coronavirus funding that was allocated to sovereign nations that have free association with the United States such as the Republic of the Marshall Islands, the Republic of Palau, and the Federal States of Micronesia. The programs included in this analysis do not necessarily provide funding to all U.S. territories.

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Additional Resources

Learn more about the policy responses to the pandemic and see how the economy has been impacted at the state and federal level.

How Much of the Latest Federal Stimulus Will Go to State and Local Governments?

$362 billion is included in the American Rescue Plan and allocated to sub-federal governments in the following amounts. See the breakdown.

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What's in the American Rescue Plan?

Here's a breakdown of the major programs in the American Rescue Plan and how much they cost.

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Which Coronavirus Relief Programs Provided the Most Bang for the Buck?

While there is no single ideal way to deal with such a complex policy challenge as the pandemic, we can glean insights about how our responses have been working.

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Understanding the Coronavirus Crisis

Key fiscal and economic indicators, research, and analysis as our nation responds and recovers.

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How Were State Budgets Doing Before the Economic Slowdown? And How Might the Pandemic Change Things?

The coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has contributed to a significant budget crunch at the state level that threatens a range of basic government programs and services.

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How Effective Has the Coronavirus Relief Fund Been in Helping State and Local Governments?

The Coronavirus Relief Fund was meant to alleviate strained state and local government budgets, but has it? Find out how effective COVID-19 funding has been thus far.

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