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DHS Authority

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is a cabinet-level federal agency established by the Homeland Security Act of 2002, bringing together 22 federal agencies into a single, unified department. This page covers DHS's core mandate, operational scope, primary functions, and the structural framework within which the agency operates. From border security to cybersecurity to disaster response, DHS touches nearly every dimension of domestic safety and federal governance — making it one of the most consequential agencies in the federal government. Readers will also find here a summary of related reference content on this site covering service access, common questions, and the full scope of DHS programs.


Primary applications and contexts

DHS operates across at least six distinct mission areas, each with its own statutory basis, operational leadership, and stakeholder population:

This breadth means that DHS intersects with daily civilian life in ways that are often underappreciated — from the REAL ID-compliant driver's license required for domestic air travel to federal flood insurance coverage for homeowners in mapped floodplains.


How this connects to the broader framework

DHS sits within the Executive Branch and reports through the Secretary of Homeland Security, a Senate-confirmed position. The department was created in direct response to the September 11, 2001 attacks, which exposed critical coordination failures among the 22 predecessor agencies — including the Secret Service, the Customs Service, and the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS).

The foundational legislation, the Homeland Security Act of 2002 (Pub. L. 107-296), remains the primary statutory authority governing the department's structure and powers. Subsequent legislation, including the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004, further refined inter-agency information-sharing requirements that DHS coordinates.

DHS also operates within the broader national security architecture alongside the Department of Defense (DoD) and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI). A critical distinction applies here: DHS is a domestic agency. Its authority is oriented toward civilian protection inside U.S. borders, whereas DoD commands military force abroad. This boundary defines the separation between homeland security and national defense — two overlapping but legally distinct mandates. When domestic incidents require military support, the legal framework of the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 constrains how DoD assets may be deployed, leaving DHS as the primary federal civilian authority for domestic emergency response.

This site belongs to the broader reference framework maintained by Authority Network America, which coordinates subject-matter coverage across government, civic, and regulatory verticals at the national level.


Scope and definition

The formal definition of "homeland security" as a policy concept is set out in Presidential Policy Directive 8 (PPD-8), which describes national preparedness as covering prevention, protection, mitigation, response, and recovery from natural disasters, acts of terrorism, and other catastrophic incidents.

DHS employs approximately 240,000 personnel across its components, making it the third-largest cabinet department by workforce size (DHS, About DHS). Its annual discretionary budget has consistently exceeded $60 billion in recent appropriations cycles, reflecting the scale of operational demands across border, cyber, and disaster functions.

The Key Dimensions and Scopes of DHS page on this site breaks down the programmatic and geographic scope of DHS activities in greater structural detail, including how funding flows to state and local governments through grant programs like the Homeland Security Grant Program (HSGP).


Why this matters operationally

For individuals, the operational footprint of DHS is most visible at points of interaction: a TSA checkpoint, a USCIS interview, a FEMA disaster assistance application, or a CISA advisory affecting an employer's IT infrastructure. For state and local governments, DHS is a principal source of preparedness funding, training standards, and interoperability requirements.

Understanding what DHS is — and what it is not — prevents misrouting of requests and misattribution of authority. Immigration enforcement is not the same as immigration benefits; cybersecurity advisories are not the same as law enforcement directives. Clarity on these distinctions determines whether constituents, employers, and civic organizations engage with the correct component agency.

Readers with specific procedural or eligibility questions can consult the DHS: Frequently Asked Questions page, which addresses common points of confusion across DHS program areas. Additional guidance on accessing DHS services is available through the How to Get Help for DHS page, which covers service channels, documentation requirements, and component-specific contact pathways.

This site addresses DHS across the full range of its public-facing functions — from service access and eligibility to structural program dimensions — providing a reference-grade foundation for civic engagement with one of the federal government's most operationally complex departments.

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Live network data

Department of Homeland Security

$103.2B

FY2024 enacted budget · 262,000 employees · created 2003-03-01

DHS sub-agencies

AgencyEmployeesSite
Customs and Border Protection (CBP)65,000cbpauthority.com
Transportation Security Administration (TSA)60,000tsaauthority.com
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)21,000
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)21,000femaauthority.com
U.S. Coast Guard56,000
U.S. Secret Service8,300
Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers (FLETC)1,500
Science and Technology Directorate (S&T)600

Source: DHS Annual Performance Report FY2024 (https://www.dhs.gov/sites/default/files/2025-02/2025_0214_apr_fy2024.pdf)

Aggregated 2026-05-03T00:01:56Z