Skip to main content
An official website of the United States Government Here’s how you know
Official websites use .gov A .gov website belongs to an official Government organization in the United States.
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS A lock or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.
  • GPO
    • U.S. Government Publishing Office
    • govinfo
    • U.S. Government Bookstore
    • Ben's Guide to the U.S. Government
GPO
  • Contact Us
  • Login
FDLP
  • Depository Tools
    • Federal Depository Library Directory
    • askGPO
    • FDLP Data Manager (FDM)
    • Claims
    • Depository Selection Information Management System (DSIMS)
    • Print Distribution Dashboard
    • Item Lister
    • List of Classes
    • Reporting Publications
    • GovInfo
    • FDLP eXchange
    • PURL Usage Reporting Tool
    • Shipping Lists
    • WEBTech Notes
    • UNION-L
    • LSCM GitHub Repositories
    • FDLP Resource Guides
    • Ben's Guide to the U.S. Government
  • Requirements & Guidance
    • Regulations
    • Guidance
    • Instructions
    • Collections & Databases
    • Promotion
    • FDLP eXchange Tips
  • Preservation
    • Preservation at GPO
    • Trusted Digital Repository Audit and Certification
  • About The FDLP
    • Superintendent of Documents
    • Depository Library Council
    • Join the FDLP
    • FDLP Academy
    • LSCM Digital Imaging Efforts
    • FDLP Training
    • Events and Conferences
    • FDLP Events Calendar
    • Projects
    • Collaborations with GPO
    • File Repository
    • Mission & History
    • Digital FDLP Implementation
    • Notable Numbers
    • The National Collection
  • Cataloging & Classification
    • GPO Cataloging Guidelines
    • Superintendent of Documents Classification Guidelines
    • Cataloging Record Distribution Program
    • Cataloging & Indexing
    • Catalog of U.S. Government Publications
    • Sources of GPO Cataloging Records
    • GPO Statement on Outdated and Offensive Language
  1. Home
  2. Superintendent of Documents Classification Guidelines
  3. Presidential Publications

Presidential Publications

  • Last Updated: July 25, 2023
  • Published: November 12, 2021

Most publications of U.S. Government agencies follow the classification rules as presented in the main guidance sections. The publications of the Executive Office of the President, the Vice President, and Presidential commissions and committees established by executive order that report to the President have specific rules outlined here.

The agency symbol assigned to the President of the United States is PR, followed by the number corresponding to the ordinal number of succession to the Presidency:

Examples

PR 44.2:EX 8Empowering local partners to prevent violent extremism in the United States

Subdivisions after the agency symbol are established following normal practice. Special treatment prevents unnecessary establishment of new classes and keeps together the publications of organizations appointed by one President.

Presidential Committees and Commissions

Over the years, U.S. Presidents have appointed a number of special committees and commissions to study particular problems. Their findings are then reported directly to the Chief Executive. These organizations usually cease to exist after making their report. Publications are typically few in number, and normal bureau treatment is not practical.

Presidentially-appointed committees and commissions are assigned to one class: PR --.8:. The dashes in this example correspond to the number of the Presidential administration. A Cutter number is assigned to each commission or committee based on the principal subject word of its name.

A slash and a Cutter number based on the principal subject word of the publication’s title follow the Cutter designation for the committee or commission. The PR--.8: class is unusual in using two Cutter numbers in sequence after the colon. The same treatment is used for commissions established by Congress (see Congressional and Legislative Branch Publications).

Examples

PR 44.8:AR 5/R 29National Commission on the Future of the Army: report to the President and the Congress of the United States, January 28, 2016

In this example, the ‘44’ identifies this as the Obama administration (44th President) and uses the Cutter ‘AR 5’ for ‘Army’ and ‘R 29’ for ‘Report.’

When a class has been established for a committee, the class continues under the establishing President, even though a new President may be elected. If the new President renews the establishment of the committee, then the class is transferred to the .8 class for the subsequent President.

Presidential Commissions vs Presidential Initiatives

While Presidential committees and commissions are classed under PR, Presidential initiatives are typically classed as part of the agency in which the initiative is housed. This can be determined by checking the Executive Order establishing the initiative. For jointly-housed or co-chaired initiatives, class the initiative under the primary agency based on funding or predominance of staffing.

Examples

ED 1.2:L 34/3Fulfilling America's future; Latinas in the U.S., 2015 (White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for Hispanics)    

ED 1.8:N 21More than mascots: a resource guide for ensuring native youth experience safe and welcoming school environments (White House Initiative on American Indian and Alaska Native Education)

Permanent Agencies Reporting to the President

Beginning with President John F. Kennedy’s administration, the continuing offices assigned to the President, which make up the Executive Office of the President, have been given permanent classes under the symbol PREX.

A change in administration does not change the classes for such offices as the Office of Management and Budget, Council of Economic Advisers, Council on Environmental Quality, etc. These agencies have been given individual classification numbers as subordinate offices of the Executive Office of the President:

Examples

PREX 2.2:M 31/4/2018The President’s management agenda (Office of Management and Budget)

PREX 6.2:C 99The cost of malicious cyber activity to the U.S. economy (Council of Economic Advisers)

Book numbers are added in the usual manner. See Cutter Numbers and Additions to Book Numbers for more information.

Additionally, if a commission or committee has been established for an indefinite period, then its serial publications are assigned unique classes in PREX 1 rather than in the PR stem to avoid establishing a new class with every new President. 

Vice President of the United States

Publications from the Vice President of the United States are classed using PRVP, followed by the corresponding number of the Presidential administration:

Examples

PRVP 44.2:J 57         Subsidized jobs: helping Americans get back to work (Middle Class Task Force, the Office of the Vice President of the United States)

Classification Guidelines

  • Introduction to the Classification Guidelines
  • The Classification System: A Brief History
  • Structure of the Classification Number
    • Sorting in SuDocs Order
      • Example of a SuDocs Sort
  • Class Stems
    • Letter Author Symbols
    • New Agency Classes
    • Joint Publications from Different Agencies
    • Publications Prepared by One Agency for Another
    • Serials with Changing Publishers
    • Joint Publications Issued in Series
    • Subordinate Offices
      • First and Second Levels
      • Assignment of Classes 
      • Third and Fourth Levels
      • Joint Publications from Different Subagencies
      • Name Changes and Reorganizations
  • Category Classes
    • Most Frequently Used Category Classes
      • .1 - Annual reports
      • .2 - General publications
      • .8 - Handbooks, manuals, and guides
      • .11 - Maps and Charts
      • .12 - Posters
    • Less Frequent Category Classes
      • .3 - Bulletins
      • .4 - Circulars
      • .5 - Laws
      • .6 - Regulations, rules, and instructions
      • .7 - Press releases
      • .9 - Bibliographies and Lists of Publications
      • .10 - Directories
      • .13 - Forms
      • .14 - Addresses
  • Cutter Numbers
    • Cutter Table and Its Use
      • Filing Order for Cutter Numbers
      • Slash Numbers
      • Selecting Cutter Words
      • Words to Avoid when Cuttering
      • Sets With a Collective Title
      • Foreign Language Editions
      • Numbers in Titles
      • Cuttering Acronyms and Initialisms
    • Cuttering: Geographic Topics  
      • Cuttering Related Documents Covering the Same Subject but Different Geographic Area
      • General Subjects and Geographic Terms
      • Cuttering Geographic Terms Using Personal Names
      • Maps
      • Cuttering Multi-Part Geographic Names
      • State Cutter Numbers
    • State Cutter Numbers
  • Additions to Book Numbers
    • Dates
      • Year Format
      • Dates for Revised Editions
      • Punctuation in Dates or Date Ranges
    • Volume, Part, Chapter, and Section Numbers
      • Volume Number and Date: Which Comes First?
    • Words and Abbreviations
      • Foreign-language Publications
    • Multiple Word Phrases in a Suffix
    • Multiple Versions of a Publication
      • Corrected Copies of Numbered Volumes
    • Standard Abbreviations and Words
    • State Abbreviations
  • Classes by Publication Type
    • Corrections
    • Errata
    • Preliminary, Initial, Draft, and Final Reports
    • Reprints
    • Preprints and Separates
    • Summaries and Executive Summaries
    • Electronic Products
    • Sets with Multiple Publication Types
  • Monographic Series
    • Identifying a Monographic Series
    • Assigning New Series Classes
      • Series Related to Existing Classes by Subject
    • Structure of the Series Class
    • Departmental Series vs. Bureau Series
    • Series Book Numbers
      • Series Numbering
      • Unusual Series Numbering
      • Series Numbering and Revised Editions
      • Numbering System Changes
      • Two Series on One Publication
      • Series Number versus Agency Control Number
    • Letters and Phrases Appearing on Publications
    • Volumes, Parts, or Sections
    • Publications Which Are Not Series or Serials
      • Multipart Monographs versus Series
      • Other Situations
  • Continuing Resources
    • Identifying a Continuing Resource
    • Serials
    • Integrating Resources
    • Assigning New Continuing Resource Classes
      • Works Related to Category Classes
      • Works Related to Existing Classes by Subject
      • New Classes to Reflect Changes for Existing Serials
      • Serials within Series: Separate Class Approach
      • Serials with a Constant Series Number
    • Cuttering a Serial or, When Not to Establish a New Class Stem for a Serial
      • Serials within Series: Cuttering Approach
      • Publications of Short Duration
      • Other cases for Cuttering
    • Serials Designation
      • Number 1 for First Month Appears Annually
      • Date incorporated in Series Number
      • Volume and Number
    • Date
      • Annual (and Less Frequent) Publications  
      • Semiannual Publications
      • Publications Issued Three or More Times a Year
      • Variations in Publication Cycles
      • Release Date vs. Coverage Date
    • Special Issues of Serials
      • Supplements
      • Indexes
    • Frequently Revised Monographs Cataloged as Serials
  • Presidential Publications
    • Presidential Committees and Commissions
    • Presidential Commissions vs Presidential Initiatives
    • Permanent Agencies Reporting to the President
    • Vice President of the United States
  • Congressional and Legislative Branch Publications
    • Y 4. - Congressional Committee Publications
      • Constructing the Committee Designation
      • Reorganized Committees and Name Changes
      • Joint Hearings
      • Publications Prepared by One Committee for the Use of Another
      • Individual Book Numbers
    • Y 1.-: - Congress as a Whole, House and Senate as a Whole
      • Individual Book Numbers
      • House and Senate Documents and Reports
      • Y 1.1/2: - U. S. Congressional Serial Set
      • Y 1.2/5: - United States Code
    • Boards, Commissions, and Independent or Temporary Committees Established by Congress
      • Boards, Commissions, and Committees Established within the Executive Branch
      • Y 3. Boards and Commissions Outside the Executive Branch
    • Y 4.2: and Y 4.3: - Select and Special Committees (As Appointed)
    • Y 7.1: - Memorial Addresses
    • Y 9. - Speeches
    • Y 10: and Y 11: - Subordinate Offices
    • X 1.1: - Congressional Record
    • XJH: and XJS: - House and Senate Journals
    • Y and X General Issues
      • Serial Publications
      • Star Prints
      • Erratum/Errata
  • U.S. Participation in International Organizations
  • Cartographic Resources
    • Category Classes for Maps and Charts
    • General Rules
    • U.S. Geological Survey Maps
      • Coordinates
      • Map Reference Numbers
      • Northwest Quadrant 
      • Northeast Quadrant
      • Southwest Quadrant
      • Southeast Quadrant
      • Edition Date
    • Bureau of Land Management Maps
    • U.S. Forest Service Maps
      • Revision Dates
    • National Ocean Service Nautical Charts
    • Map Types
  • Classification Guidelines for Digital Reproductions
    •  Classification by Type of Digital Reproduction
  • Superintendent of Documents Classification Guidelines for Specific Publications and Classes
    • A 13.28: - Forest Service OHV (Off-Highway Vehicle) Maps
    • AE 2.106/3: - Code of Federal Regulations (CFR)
    • I 53.11: - Pacific Northwest Recreation Map Series
    • S 1.1: - Foreign Relations of the United States (FRUS)
    • SI 8. - National Gallery of Art
    • Y 1.1/3: - The Constitution of the United States of America: analysis and interpretation: annotations of cases decided by the Supreme Court of the United States to ...
    • Classing Publications in ERIC (Education Resources Information Center) Database

questionsPlease submit your questions about the Superintendent of Documents Classification Guidelines via askGPO by choosing the “Federal Depository Library Program” tile and selecting the category “Cataloging/Metadata (Policy and Records).

FDLP

Federal Depository Library Program (FDLP) • 732 N Capitol Street, NW, Washington, DC 20401

Privacy Policy

Connect with GPO