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ACM · U.S. Federal Contractor

AECOM


U.S. federal contract obligations by fiscal year, summed across AECOM’s contracting subsidiaries. From USAspending.gov.

$536.8M
FY2025 Obligations
3
Fiscal Years

Obligations by Fiscal Year

U.S. contract obligations per federal fiscal year (Oct–Sep), newest first. Source: USAspending.gov (public).

Fiscal YearObligationsRecipient Entities
FY2025$536.8M41
FY2024$1.14B50
FY2023$1.23B53

Top Recipient Entities (FY2025)

The federal recipient registrations that roll up to AECOM, by obligation. This is the “show your work” behind the totals above.

RecipientFY Obligations
AECOM TECHNICAL SERVICES, INC.$372.6M
AECOM SERVICES, LLC$24.4M
AECOM INTERNATIONAL INC.$23.8M
AECOM - B&V USACE MED SATOC JV$21.0M
AECOM CONSTRUCTION, INC.$19.0M
AECOM USA, INC.$13.0M
AECOM + TETRA TECH JOINT VENTURE$8.7M
AECOM SERVICES, LLC$8.7M
STANTEC GS-AECOM PACIFIC JV$8.2M
URS-SMITHGROUP JOINT VENTURE$8.1M

About this data

Obligations are dollars the federal government committed to AECOM under awarded U.S. contracts (not grants or loans) in a fiscal year (Oct 1–Sep 30). Totals are summed across the company’s contracting subsidiaries via the federal recipient hierarchy — e.g. brand entities roll up to their public parent. In plain English: a rising federal book is a leading read on government revenue. Year-to-year swings are normal for lumpy, big-ticket programs. Source: USAspending.gov (public).

Questions this page answers

How much did AECOM receive in U.S. federal contracts in FY2025?

AECOM was obligated $536.8M in U.S. federal contract awards in FY2025 across 41 recipient entities, per USAspending.gov.

How many years of federal-contract data does Oxford Ledge track for AECOM?

Oxford Ledge tracks 3 federal fiscal years of contract obligations for AECOM, from FY2023 to FY2025.

What are federal contract obligations?

Obligations are the dollar amounts the U.S. government has committed to a contractor under awarded contracts in a federal fiscal year (October through September). They reflect awards, not necessarily cash disbursed.

Where does this federal-contract data come from?

The figures are from USAspending.gov, the U.S. government's public record of federal spending, aggregated to the contractor's public-company parent.