Linking to USA.gov

What It Is

Per OMB Policy (Section F), all federal websites must have a link to USA.gov "on their principal website and all major entry points."

Why It's Important

  • Section 204 of the E-Government Act of 2002 designates USA.gov as the official web portal of the U.S. government.
  • USA.gov serves as the "homepage" for the entire U.S. government by providing a topical and organizational directory of U.S. government websites and a government-wide search index. Having this type of high-level "homepage" helps people start browsing from a known location.
  • Visitors to your agency's website may become frustrated if they're looking for government information and services that are provided by another agency. Linking to USA.gov will help visitors who need information from different agencies, and who need a "starting point" to find government information.
  • Linking to USA.gov promotes seamless government by allowing citizens to access the vast amount of information from across government without having to know which agency sponsors the information.

How to Implement

You can use either a text link or a logo:

You should use the following text for link descriptions and alt text:

  • English: "USA.gov: The U.S. Government's Official Web Portal"
  • Spanish: "GobiernoUSA.gov, el portal oficial del Gobierno de los Estados Unidos"

What about state and local government websites?

We highly encourage state and local government websites to link to USA.gov (and GobiernoUSA.gov for Spanish pages). This helps visitors who want government information from various levels of government, but might not know where to start. USA.gov helps people find U.S. government information and services at the federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial levels.

Examples

 

Toolbox

Page Updated or Reviewed: June 30, 2009