Legal Status
This site displays a prototype of a “Web 2.0” version of the daily Federal Register. It is not an official legal edition of the Federal Register, and does not replace the official print version or the official electronic version on GPO’s govinfo.gov.
The documents posted on this site are XML renditions of published Federal Register documents. Each document posted on the site includes a link to the corresponding official PDF file on govinfo.gov. This prototype edition of the daily Federal Register on FederalRegister.gov will remain an unofficial informational resource until the Administrative Committee of the Federal Register (ACFR) issues a regulation granting it official legal status. For complete information about, and access to, our official publications and services, go to About the Federal Register on NARA's archives.gov.
The OFR/GPO partnership is committed to presenting accurate and reliable regulatory information on FederalRegister.gov with the objective of establishing the XML-based Federal Register as an ACFR-sanctioned publication in the future. While every effort has been made to ensure that the material on FederalRegister.gov is accurately displayed, consistent with the official SGML-based PDF version on govinfo.gov, those relying on it for legal research should verify their results against an official edition of the Federal Register. Until the ACFR grants it official status, the XML rendition of the daily Federal Register on FederalRegister.gov does not provide legal notice to the public or judicial notice to the courts.
Reader Aids
Website Features
Sections
We organize published Federal Register documents into six sections, similar to a web journal (Money, Environment, World, Science & Technology, Business & Industry, and Health & Public Welfare). We think these sections include themes that have broad interest and which cover a majority of the documents published in the Federal Register. We feature articles in these sections based on the OFR’s editorial judgment, user interest, and agency input. Use the “Sections” pull-down in the main navigation at the top of any page to see highlighted documents and suggested searches.
Note: Sections have no legal impact on any documents or their publication, but do offer another way to find documents of interest.
Suggested Searches
Each section contains suggested searches designed around various areas of interest:
- Terms that users have frequently used to search this site, including Dodd-Frank regulations, health care reform, education initiatives, and energy efficiency.
- Frequently published document types, including information collection notices, endangered & threatened species findings, oil and gas leasing documents, and fishery management decisions.
- Issues that become vitally important and timely, based on current events, including the “Disaster Declarations & Assistance” search.
- Document types that are published infrequently and are hard to find but are frequently needed, including Social Security Rulings.
Note: We try to refine the suggested searches to minimize irrelevant items, but we cannot eliminate all irrelevant documents. Our suggested searches may also exclude some documents that you find relevant to the topic. If a search is not accurate enough for your purposes, you can customize these suggested search results to fit your needs.
Table of Contents
The “Current Issue” link on the home page takes users to the daily Federal Register table of contents. The table of contents page also offers a calendar tool or a direct date entry box to view tables of contents of issues back to 1994.
Agency pages
Each agency that has published in the Federal Register has its own landing page, accessible from the Agency List, with a description of its mission and selected information, including “Significant Documents” (determined by OMB and published in the Unified Agenda) and collections of the most recent documents and public inspection postings. You can access Agency pages by clicking on the “Browse” pull-down tab that appears in the main navigation at the top of every page or by using the search field at the bottom of the home page.
Topics (CFR Indexing Terms) pages
Each document that amends (or proposes to amend) the CFR contains a List of Subjects with terms that relate to the affected CFR parts. The agency selects the appropriate term(s) from the Federal Register Thesaurus. Selecting any term displays all documents that include that term in the list of subjects. You can access these pages by clicking on the “Browse” pull-down tab that appears in the main navigation at the top of every page or by using the search field at the bottom of the home page.