About Legislation Text of the U.S. Congress

Congress.gov provides various methods for accessing the full texts of legislation. Among them are:

Scope of Coverage

New legislation texts become available on Congress.gov throughout each day, shortly after they are published on GPO’s govinfo.

Bill and resolution texts published by GPO are available on Congress.gov from 1993 (103rd Congress). Bill and resolution texts from 1989 (101st Congress) to 1992 (102nd Congress) that predate authenticated digital publishing are partially available.

Law texts published by GPO are available on Congress.gov dating from 1951 (82nd Congress).

Text versions for bills and joint resolutions dating from 1799 (6th Congress) to 1873 (42nd Congress) are available on Congress.gov. House-originated bill text versions are available from 1799 (6th Congress), Senate-originated bill text versions are available from 1819 (16th Congress), and Senate-originated joint resolution text versions are available from 1823 (18th Congress). The text versions are undesignated and not necessarily in order of legislative procedure. In the legislation text search results, these text versions use the file extension UBTV (Unidentified Bill Text Version).

Please note that when both the House and Senate pass or adopt legislation containing the same legislative text, an ENR measure is created and made available online. The paper version (the official document of record) is presented to the President for his signature. The time between when the last chamber agreed to the legislation and the ENR version is made available at GPO’s govinfo is variable and largely depends on the size of the legislation. Larger documents take longer to prepare. The time between when the ENR is available and additional action steps by the President are made available is also variable and depends on the actions taken by the President. More information on Presidential actions and some of the timeframes can be found in “How Our Laws are Made”.

Browsing Legislation Text

Laws – Throughout each day, shortly after NARA assigns public law (PL) numbers, enacted bills and joint resolutions appear on the Public Laws list. Throughout each day, shortly after new slip law texts are published on GPO’s govinfo, PL numbers on that list link to texts. Private Laws are in a separate list.

Law texts can also be browsed from the “Text” tab of bill and resolution records example.

Bills and resolutions – Legislation by Number in the Browse menu facilitates access to all types of House and Senate legislation.

Searching Legislation Text

When you search legislation text within Congress.gov you are searching only the items that you will find displayed on the “Text” tab of bill and resolution records. There are three options for limiting your search to legislation text.

  1. Use the Legislation Text search form
  2. Select “Text – All Bill Versions” or “Text – Latest” from Query Builder
  3. Use text fields from the search bar or Command Line search

The Legislation Text search form uses a special set of search operators, including proximity and ordered proximity operators. You can find information about search operators for use specifically on the Legislation Text form in Search Tools.

You have the option to select “Show Keywords In Context” when searching using the Words and Phrases box. After executing a word search, check the box next to “Show Keywords In Context” to view up to two snippets within the text containing the searched word or phrase.

Legislation text from the 6th to 42nd Congresses (1799-1873)

While legislation texts from 1799 (6th Congress) to 1873 (42nd Congress) are viewable on the “Text” tab, they are not searchable. However, you may search for these bills and joint resolutions using keywords in the title or by searching using the bill number citation.

Viewing Legislation Text

Results lists from the Legislation Text quick search form are unique within Congress.gov by including bill text version abbreviations. Those abbreviations are necessary to differentiate the “Engrossed in House – EH” version from the “Introduced in Senate – IS” versions of a bill.