Becomes a Law
A complete plain-English guide to how an idea can become federal law.
A bill is a formal proposal. It may begin with a member of Congress, a committee, a president's agenda, an agency problem, a court decision, a public campaign, or a request from voters. To become law, that idea must survive committees, floor rules, votes in both chambers, final agreement on identical text, and presidential action.
Law is written slowly because every step creates a chance to revise, reject, or publicly defend it.
What The Process Does
The federal lawmaking process is intentionally hard. It forces a proposal to move through many decision points before it can bind the country. A bill usually needs a sponsor, committee attention, floor time, majority support in the House, majority support in the Senate, agreement on the same final language, and either the President's signature or enough congressional support to override a veto.
The Standard Path
Not every bill follows the same route, but most successful bills pass through these basic stages. Each stage creates a public record that helps citizens see who supported, opposed, changed, delayed, or advanced the proposal.
Idea And Drafting
A law begins as an idea for a new program, a change to an existing statute, a response to a public problem, or a proposal from constituents, experts, committees, agencies, or the President. Legislative counsel often turns the idea into bill text.
Introduction
A representative or senator introduces the bill. House bills receive an H.R. number; Senate bills receive an S. number. The text, sponsors, cosponsors, and official actions can then be tracked through Congress.gov.
Committee Referral
The bill is sent to one or more committees with jurisdiction over the subject. Committee chairs, subcommittee leaders, majority and minority members, and staff decide whether the bill receives hearings, markup, or no further action.
Hearings And Markup
Committees may hold hearings, collect testimony, question witnesses, request agency views, and revise the bill. During markup, members debate amendments and vote on whether to report the bill to the full chamber.
Floor Action
If leadership brings the bill to the floor, the chamber debates and votes under its own rules. The House usually controls debate through structured rules. The Senate often allows broader debate, which can make unanimous consent and cloture important.
The Other Chamber
If the bill passes one chamber, it moves to the other, where referral, committee work, debate, amendment, and voting may happen again. The second chamber may pass the bill as received, amend it, or pass a different version.
Final Agreement
Before a bill can go to the President, the House and Senate must pass the exact same text. Differences may be resolved through amendments between the chambers or through a conference committee and conference report.
Presidential Action
The President may sign the bill, veto it, or take no action. Congress can override a regular veto by a two-thirds vote in both chambers. If Congress adjourns and the President does not sign in time, a pocket veto may prevent the bill from becoming law.
Where Bills Usually Change Or Die
The public often sees the final vote, but most important decisions happen earlier. A bill can stall because leadership does not schedule it, a committee chair does not move it, amendments divide supporters, cost estimates raise concerns, the Senate cannot end debate, or the House and Senate cannot agree on final text.
No hearing or markup
Many bills are introduced but never receive formal committee action. This is the most common way proposals disappear.
No floor time
A bill may leave committee but still need leadership support, a House rule, or Senate agreement before it receives a vote.
Amendments reshape support
A bill can gain or lose votes when members add exceptions, deadlines, funding limits, new programs, or enforcement rules.
House and Senate versions diverge
Even when both chambers support the general idea, final language may be difficult to reconcile.
Veto threat or veto
A President may signal opposition before final passage, sign the bill, veto it, or force Congress to find a supermajority.
Law still needs execution
After enactment, agencies may need funding, rules, forms, guidance, databases, or enforcement plans before the law affects daily life.
House And Senate Differences
Both chambers must approve the same bill, but they do not work the same way. The House is larger, more structured, and more leadership-driven. The Senate is smaller, more flexible, and gives individual senators more leverage.
| Topic | House of Representatives | Senate |
|---|---|---|
| Debate | Usually time-limited and governed by a rule. | Often more open-ended, with broader debate. |
| Amendments | Often limited by the Rules Committee. | Usually more flexible unless an agreement limits debate. |
| Revenue bills | Must originate in the House. | May amend revenue bills but does not originate them. |
| Filibuster and cloture | No modern filibuster for ordinary bills. | Extended debate may require cloture to end. |
| Confirmation and treaties | No role in confirming nominees or ratifying treaties. | Provides advice and consent on many nominations and treaties. |
What To Watch In The Public Record
A visitor trying to follow a bill should look beyond whether it has “passed.” The useful record includes sponsors, cosponsors, committee referrals, hearing notices, amendments, committee reports, CBO cost estimates, roll-call votes, floor statements, conference reports, public law numbers, and later rulemaking or implementation notices.
Congress.gov
Search federal bills, actions, text, sponsors, amendments, committee activity, and public laws.
House votesOffice of the Clerk
Find House roll-call votes and see how each representative voted.
Senate votesSenate Roll Call Votes
Review Senate votes, vote numbers, dates, and member positions.
Laws after enactmentGovInfo Public Laws
Read public laws after they are enacted and published by the Government Publishing Office.
Terms To Know
Bill
A proposal for a new law or a change to existing law.
Committee Referral
The formal assignment of a bill to the committee that handles the subject.
Markup
The committee meeting where members debate, amend, and vote on bill text.
Conference Committee
A temporary House-Senate group that resolves differences between versions of a bill.
Enrolled Bill
The final version passed by both chambers and sent to the President.
Pocket Veto
A veto that occurs when Congress adjourns and the President does not sign the bill in time.
Public Law
A bill that has passed both chambers and become law.
Cloture
A Senate procedure used to end extended debate and move toward a vote.
Official Sources
USAGov: How Laws Are Made
Plain-language federal overview of the bill-to-law process and House/Senate differences.
House: The Legislative Process
Official House explanation of bill introduction, committee work, floor action, Senate action, conference, enrollment, and presidential action.
Senate: Bills, Acts, And Laws
Explains bills, joint resolutions, concurrent resolutions, and simple resolutions.
Congress.gov
The central public tool for federal bills, amendments, committee actions, sponsors, and legislative history.
Quick Link Guide
One-click access to other sections of the government education guide.