Judge Orders Nationwide Halt on NIH Cuts to Overhead Costs

A seal on the entrance building at the NIH campus in Maryland.
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A federal judge ordered a nationwide pause late Monday to the Trump administration’s plans to slash National Institutes of Health payments for facilities and administrative costs.
The restraining order
The nationwide halt expands a pause granted earlier Monday that applied to 22 states whose attorneys general also sued
The lawsuits were filed in response to an NIH announcement
Indirect costs, also known as facilities and administrative (F&A) costs, are used to cover research expenses such as equipment and facilities maintenance, IT services, and administrative support. Indirect costs are paid in addition to direct research costs and are often expressed as a percentage. For example, an indirect cost rate of 50% means that for every dollar awarded as part of a research grant for eligible direct costs, the institution would receive an additional 50 cents to cover indirect costs. In this case, indirect costs would represent one-third of the total award.
In its Friday announcement, NIH said it would universally cap the indirect cost rate at 15% for both new and existing grants and claimed the reduced rate could save $4 billion annually.
The announcement estimated that NIH’s average indirect cost rate has hovered around 28% in recent years, citing a budget table that displays NIH’s total expenditures on indirect costs as a percentage of the total costs (direct plus indirect). However, the rate using this estimation method should actually be the ratio of indirect costs to direct costs, which is around 38%. If the direct costs figure cited by NIH includes grants that are ineligible for indirect costs, than the current average rate is higher than this figure.
At present, many universities have negotiated indirect cost rates that are higher than 50%. The University of Michigan has an indirect cost rate of 56%,
University groups and research organizations were quick to criticize NIH’s move,
Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME), chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, issued a statement
This is not the first time the Trump administration has tried to drastically cut NIH indirect cost rates. In 2017, the first Trump administration proposed capping
Despite bipartisan opposition, conservative leaders have continued to circulate the proposal to cut indirect cost rates, including in the policy blueprint Project 2025.
Note: This article has been updated to explain the method used in the NIH announcement to estimate the indirect cost rate and make clear the actual average rate is significantly higher.