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Saturday, May 2, 2026

DOJ Announces Increased False Claims Act Penalties as a Result of Inflation - Policy & Medicine

The Department of Justice has announced inflationary adjustments to the False Claims Act’s civil monetary penalties as a result of rising inflation, marking the second adjustment in less than one year. The adjustments are based on the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Price Index for October 2022, and the applicable inflation factor for the adjustment is 1.07745.

Increased Penalty Amounts

The minimum False Claims Act penalty increased from $12,537 to $13,508 per claim while the maximum penalty increased from $25,076 to $27,018 per claim. This follows the 2022 final rule, where the applicable inflation factor was 1.06222 and the minimum penalty went from $11,803 to $12,537.

For Program Fraud Civil Remedies Act violations that involve a False Claim or False Statement have also increased to $13,508 from $12,537. Fines relating to the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act and involve a violation involving surplus government property are increased to $6,891 from $6,396. Fines for violations involving kickbacks under the Anti-Kickback Act increased from $25,076 to $27,018.

Ethics

Additionally, fines under the Ethics Reform Act of 1989 and penalties for Conflict of Interest Crimes increased from $110,107 to $118,635. Organizations that violate the Office of Federal Procurement Policy Act can face a $1,239,642 fine per violation.

Americans With Disabilities Act

Fines for violations of the Americans With Disabilities Act also increased, with fines for public...



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