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Government Contracts · Defense & Aerospace

Honeywell government contracts

Industrial-and-aerospace company supplying avionics, defense systems, and nuclear-security operations.

Since October 1, 2023, federal agencies have obligated $21,030,679,561 to Honeywell in prime contract awards, across 10 agencies.

Source: USAspending.gov, prime contract awards (types A–D), October 1, 2023 – June 30, 2026. Figures are obligated dollars, not proof of waste.

← All contractors · Spending by agency · Defense & Aerospace money in Congress

Which agencies pay Honeywell

Prime contract obligations to Honeywell by awarding agency. These amounts sum to the company's contract total above.

Agencies paying Honeywell in prime contracts.
Awarding agencyContract obligations
Department of Energy $17565201610
Department of Defense $2994801177
General Services Administration $254411205
Department of Transportation $113742221
Department of Homeland Security $35387008
Department of Housing and Urban Development $17066773
Department of Veterans Affairs $16099715
National Aeronautics and Space Administration $13170656
Department of Justice $12854377
Department of the Treasury $7944819

Largest individual awards

The biggest single prime contract awards to Honeywell in this window. Each links to its full record on USAspending.gov.

Honeywell, Congress, and the money trail

Federal contracts are one side of the ledger. The other is political money. See which members of Congress are funded by Defense & Aerospace employers, how the federal budget breaks down by agency, and whether any member of Congress has traded HON stock.

About this data

Campaign finance figures are aggregated from public Federal Election Commission filings (public domain). Stock trades, lobbying, and contract figures are derived from disclosures compiled by QuiverQuant. Contributions are grouped by the donor's reported employer — they are not OpenSecrets industry clusters, and the totals combine individual contributions with affiliated PAC activity where reported.

Contributions and disclosures are not proof of influence. They show who gave and what was reported, not why a member voted a particular way. Amounts reflect the cycle or as-of dates noted beside each figure and may be revised as later filings are processed.

Want to dig deeper or request the underlying records yourself? See our FOIA guide, or go straight to the FEC data portal and QuiverQuant.

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govtransparencyproject.org

Government Transparency Project is an independent, non-governmental publication. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or operated by the U.S. government or any federal agency. Data is sourced from public APIs (FRED (Federal Reserve), U.S. Treasury, Congress.gov, Bureau of Labor Statistics).

For official U.S. government information, visit USA.gov.