KEY POINTS
  • The debt ceiling is the legal limit set by Congress of how much the U.S. government can borrow, currently $31.381 trillion.
  • Lifting the debt limit does not authorize any new spending; it allows the government to borrow more money to cover existing commitments.
  • The last major rift over the debt ceiling was in late 2011, driven by holdout from a newly elected Republican congressional majority.
US House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, Republican of Louisiana, speaks alongside House Republican Conference Chair Representative Elise Stefanik (L), Republican of New York, as they speak during a press conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, January 10, 2023.

House Republican Majority Leader Steve Scalise sidestepped thorny questions Tuesday on whether Congress would allow the U.S. to default on its debt after lawmakers adopted new rules making it more difficult to raise federal limits.

The U.S. is perilously close to hitting its debt ceiling of about $31.4 trillion, the legal limit set by Congress of how much the federal government can borrow. It includes the total amount of federal debt outstanding, about $24.5 trillion, as well as the nearly $6.9 trillion the government has borrowed from itself. If Congress doesn't soon raise the debt ceiling, it would inevitably trigger a default on U.S. Treasury bonds — an unprecedented event that would plunge the nation into financial crisis.