Defense Research Cut in Final FY25 Budget

An aerial view of the Pentagon.
Department of Defense
The funding legislation
Although the legislation maintains most science agencies’ budgets at or near the levels from the previous fiscal year, it does not carry over congressionally directed spending, or “adds,” which have tacked on billions of dollars for DOD research over the past decade.
Funding for science and technology programs at DOD grew from about $13 billion in 2017 to $22 billion in 2023 before falling slightly to $21.5 billion in 2024. Congressional adds have been the principal source of those increases, as DOD routinely requested cuts to the S&T budget during that same period, in some cases by double digit percentages. The S&T portfolio is a subset of DOD’s Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation (RDT&E) budget and consists of basic research, applied research, and advanced technology development programs.
“Congress appears to have provided the Pentagon pretty significant latitude on how they’re going to spend the roughly $141 billion in RDT&E,” said John Latini, co-chair of the Coalition for National Security Research, which advocates for S&T programs at DOD. The legislation specifies total amounts for RDT&E across the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Space Force but does not specify any amounts for RDT&E sub-categories.
Latini said he finds it “hard to believe” that the current funding situation will result in DOD prioritizing its S&T programs, given its history of requesting cuts. For FY25, the department proposed
Furthermore, the appropriated funding levels for RDT&E still fall short of DOD’s FY25 budget request by almost $2 billion dollars. “They’ll have to make cuts relative to what they had asked for in the first place. So I don’t know how they’ll come up with that,” Latini said. “But given that there does not seem to be a lot of support for basic research or applied research in the Pentagon, I would not be surprised if early-stage research takes a disproportionate hit,” he added.
Last month, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said
The Republican chairs of the defense appropriations subcommittees have sent detailed funding tables