Elon Musk’s DOGE task force updated its website on Wednesday with a feed of X posts tracking government cuts and a promise to provide receipts—“no later than Valentine’s day 💘“—of its nascent effort to gut $2 trillion from federal spending.
The site, which went live three weeks ago, previously featured only a logo on a holding page. Musk told reporters on Tuesday that cuts, aggregated on the Department of Government Efficiency’s X account, would be embedded on the website.

In addition to the scrolling reminder of Musk’s efforts to disrupt and dismantle federal initiatives and agencies—with the full backing of President Donald Trump—the site includes a section with visualizations of government data on the size of the public service.
That “Workforce” page contains a breakdown of staffing across the federal government, using data from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management that DOGE says visitors can use to “trace your tax dollars through the bureaucracy.”

Another page, labeled “Regulations,” features an “Unconstitutionality Index,” which claims to show the “number of agency rules created by unelected bureaucrats for each law passed by Congress in 2024.”
That index, however, does not appear to be solely pulled from government sources: it is the creation of a researcher at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, a libertarian think tank that advocates for limited government, and was first published in Forbes. (DOGE links out to the article at the bottom of the page).

The biggest remaining mystery on the website is the “Savings” page, where there’s the promise to reveal more before Valentine’s Day.
DOGE claimed the reveal will be laid out in some form of “receipts.”
While it is unclear what kind of information or data will eventually be listed on the page, it is likely to document the progress of Musk’s campaign across Washington interrogating wdepartments and agencies in order to find cuts to meet his Trump-imposed deadline of July 4, 2026, at which point DOGE is supposed to wrap up its work.

DOGE has already taken rapid succession actions that have shocked large swaths of the federal bureaucracy not even a month into the second Trump administration. Among them: government diversity initiatives were shut down, more than two million federal employees were offered deferred resignation packages, and a full-scale dismantling of the $40 billion U.S. Agency for International Development is underway.