From Bill to U.S. Code

Passing both chambers and being signed into law is not the end of a bill’s journey — it’s the beginning of its life in the permanent body of U.S. law. This page explains how new laws are assigned, published, and ultimately organized into the United States Code.

1. Public Law Number Assignment
Once signed by the President (or passed over a veto), the bill receives a Public Law (P.L.) number.
  • Example: Public Law 118-42 means the 42nd law enacted by the 118th Congress.
  • This identifier is used by the Office of the Federal Register and Government Publishing Office (GPO).
Public Laws are sequentially numbered within each Congress, starting at 1.
2. Publication in the Statutes at Large
The Statutes at Large serve as the official record of all laws passed by Congress.
  • Each Public Law appears in its entirety, in chronological order.
  • The Statutes are published by the GPO and are legally authoritative — the “final word” for the text of a law.
Every act of Congress is permanently preserved in this series, dating back to 1789.
3. Codification into the U.S. Code
To make laws usable, they are grouped by subject and incorporated into the United States Code (U.S.C.).
  • The U.S. Code is divided into titles — broad areas such as Title 26: Internal Revenue Code or Title 18: Crimes and Criminal Procedure.
  • The Office of the Law Revision Counsel (OLRC) within the House updates the Code accordingly.
4. Updates and Revisions
The OLRC continuously reviews, reorganizes, and cleans up statutory text.
  • Obsolete or redundant sections are repealed or consolidated.
  • Titles are sometimes enacted into “positive law,” meaning the Code itself becomes legally binding, not just a restatement.
As of today, roughly half of the Code’s titles have been enacted into positive law.
5. Where to Access the Law
  • Congress.gov lists each bill’s Public Law number and link to the Statutes at Large.
  • GovInfo.gov hosts official Statutes volumes and searchable text.
  • USCode.House.gov maintains the most current version of the U.S. Code.
These sources ensure anyone — citizen, journalist, or scholar — can access federal law freely.
6. Why Codification Matters
Without codification, U.S. law would be an unreadable patchwork of session laws. The U.S. Code transforms it into a coherent, searchable framework — the legal foundation of the nation’s daily life.
Codification is the quiet architecture that turns legislative action into lasting structure.