Politics & Government

Nevada extremely tardy with its financial report

Today marks 460 days since fiscal year 2024 ended

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As of today, it has been 460 days since the state of Nevada’s fiscal year 2024 ended and the state has yet to publish its Annual Comprehensive Financial Report (ACFR). Nevada also did not release its FY 2023 ACFR until Aug. 15, 2025—more than two years after the period ended.

According to the Government Finance Officers Association, states should release their annual reports within 180 days of fiscal year-end. By comparison, most publicly traded corporations report even faster—often within 45 days for quarterly filings—and face enforcement if they miss deadlines. No equivalent penalty exists for states, even though they steward billions in taxpayer resources.

The broader context matters. Truth in Accounting’s 16th annual Financial State of the States report
shows 25 states couldn’t cover their bills for FY 2024 and highlights $832 billion in unfunded pension liabilities nationwide. Late ACFRs obscure the real-time fiscal picture and weaken the public’s ability to judge tradeoffs in the next budget.

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Truth in Accounting urges states to adopt a 100-day reporting goal so budget writers—and voters—have timely numbers. Releasing Nevada’s FY 2024 ACFR without further delay, and maintaining reliable public access, would be a concrete step toward restoring accountability and trust.

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