More than half a century ago, this Court highlighted the long-recognized “hazards inherent in attempting to defne for all purposes when a `cause of action' frst `accrues.' ” Crown Coat Front Co. v. United States, 386 U. S. 503, 517 (1967). Today, the majority throws that caution to the wind and engages in the same kind of misguided reasoning about statutory limitations periods that we have previously admonished. The fawed reasoning and far-reaching results of the Court's ruling in this case are staggering. First, the reasoning. The text and context of the relevant statutory provisions plainly reveal that, for facial challenges to agency regulations, the 6-year limitations period in 28 U. S. C. § 2401(a) starts running when the rule is published. The Court says otherwise today, holding that the broad statutory term “accrues” requires us to conclude that the limitations period for Administrative Procedure Act (APA) claims runs from the time of a plaintiff's injury. Never mind that this Court's precedents tell us that the meaning of “accrues” is context specifc. Never mind that, in the administrative-law context, limitations statutes uniformly run from the moment of agency action. Never mind that a plaintiff's injury is utterly irrelevant to a facial APA claim. According to the Court, we must ignore all of this because, for other kinds of claims, accrual begins at the time of a plaintiff's injury. Next, the results. The Court's baseless conclusion means that there is effectively no longer any limitations period for lawsuits that challenge agency regulations on their face.
Allowing every new commercial entity to bring fresh facial challenges to long-existing regulations is profoundly destabiPage Proof Pending Publication CORNER POST, INC. v. BOARD OF GOVERNORS, FRS lizing for both Government and businesses. It also allows well-heeled litigants to game the system by creating new entities or fnding new plaintiffs whenever they blow past the statutory deadline.
The majority refuses to accept the straightforward, commonsense, and singularly plausible reading of the limitations statute that Congress wrote. In doing so, the Court wreaks havoc on Government agencies, businesses, and society at large. I respectfully dissent.
I
When a claim accrues depends on the nature of the claim.
See Crown Coat, 386 U. S., at 517. So, understanding the context in which these claims arose is essential to determining when Congress meant for them to accrue. The facts of this very case illustrate the absurdity of the majority's one-size-fts-all approach. The procedural history is also a prime example of the gamesmanship that statutory limitations periods are enacted to prevent.
A
Start with the relevant agency regulation. In 2010, Congress required the Federal Reserve Board to issue rules for debit-card transaction fees. See 15 U. S. C. § 1693o–2(a)(1). The Board did as Congress instructed. As relevant here, in 2011, the Board issued Regulation II, capping debit-card interchange fees at 21 cents per transaction plus 0.05 percent of the transaction. 76 Fed. Reg. 43420 (2011) (codifed at 12 CFR § 235.3(b) (2022)).
As often happens, affected parties challenged Regulation II almost immediately after the Board issued it Several large trade groups sued under the APA, alleging that Regulation II was, in several respects, arbitrary, capricious, and not in accordance with law. NACS v. Board of Gover nors of FRS, 958 F. Supp. 2d 85, 95–96 (DC 2013). Ultimately, the D. C. Circuit rejected that challenge in relevant part. NACS v. Board of Governors of FRS, 746 F. 3d 474, Page Proof Pending Publication 477 (2014). And, a few months after that, we denied certiorari. See 574 U. S. 1121 (2015).
B
Now consider the facts of this challenge. In the majority's telling, this is about a single “truckstop and convenience store located in Watford City, North Dakota.” Ante, at 805. Not quite. Rather, two large trade groups initially fled this action in 2021—a full decade after the Federal Reserve Board finalized the debit-card-fee regulations at issue.
Those groups were the North Dakota Petroleum Marketers Association, a “trade association that has existed since the mid-1950s,” and the North Dakota Retail Association, another trade group. App. to Pet. for Cert. 53. Corner Post, which had only opened its doors in 2018, was not a party to the trade groups' initial complaint. The Government moved to dismiss the pleading, invoking § 2401(a)'s 6-year statute of limitations. In response, the trade groups sought leave to amend.
It was only then that Corner Post was added as a plaintiff. And, importantly, other than the addition of Corner Post, the trade groups' complaint remained practically identical to the untimely one they had fled before. Other than a few changes of phrasing and some newly available 2019 data, the amended complaint alleged the same facts and sought the same relief as the original pleading. It also included the exact same legal claims—verbatim. The only material change to the amended complaint was the addition of Corner Post.
Thus, even before I analyze the statute of limitations arguments, one can see that this case is the poster child for the type of manipulation that the majority now invites—new groups being brought in (or created) just to do an end run around the statute of limitations.1 To repeat: The claims in 1If this case illustrates one type of gamesmanship, one does not need to think hard to imagine other examples. A cash-only business that announces its intent to accept debit cards and thereby claiming injury from the debit-card rule. New owners that buy out a shop, insisting that they Page Proof Pending Publication CORNER POST, INC. v. BOARD OF GOVERNORS, FRS Corner Post's lawsuit were not new or in any way distinct (even in wording) from the pre-existing and untimely claims of the trade organizations that had been around for decades. This time, however, when the Government renewed its motion to dismiss, the plaintiffs made the case all about Corner Post. The plaintiffs argued that, because Corner Post had not yet formed as a company when the Board issued Regulation II, it simply could not be subjected to a 6-year limitations period that ran from when the challenged regulation issued back in 2011. (One wonders how a company that formed against the backdrop of a long-settled rule could possibly be entitled to complain, or claim injury, related to the regulatory environment in which it willingly entered—but I digress.) Rather than accepting that the untimely challenge remained so, Corner Post demanded a personalized, plaintiff- specifc limitations rule, giving an entity six years from when it was frst affected by a Government action to fle a facial challenge.
The District Court rejected Corner Post's argument, following the lead of every court of appeals that had ever addressed accrual of an APA facial challenge.2 It held that the too are entitled to challenge the debit-card rule based on their status as new entrants into the marketplace. It is telling that, even as the majority says that the moment of the plaintiff's injury marks the start of the limitations period for facial APA challenges, the majority fails to describe precisely when that injury occurs in this context.
2The majority's opinion says we took this case to resolve a circuit split, suggesting that the Sixth Circuit had reached the contrary conclusion. See ante, at 806–807. It had not. In Herr v. United States Forest Serv., 803 F. 3d 809 (2015), the Sixth Circuit addressed accrual in the context of an as-applied challenge after the Government had threatened enforcement. There, the Circuit pegged accrual to the moment of the injury allegedly caused by application of the rule to the plaintiff, see id., at 820, and did not discuss whether that same accrual rule would apply to facial challenges. Since Herr, neither the Sixth Circuit nor any district court within it has extended Herr's rule to facial challenges to fnal agency actions, and at least one District Court has expressly rejected such an extension. See Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication addition of Corner Post as a plaintiff did not make a difference to the timeliness of the business groups' claims. The Eighth Circuit affrmed, holding that “when plaintiffs bring a facial challenge to a fnal agency action, the right of action accrues, and the limitations period begins to run, upon publication of the regulation.” North Dakota Retail Assn. v. Board of Governors of FRS, 55 F. 4th 634, 641 (2022).
II
But here we are. Three-quarters of a century after Congress enacted the APA, a majority of this Court rejects the consensus view that, for facial challenges to agency rules, the statutory 6-year limitations period runs from the publication of the rule. Instead, it holds that an APA claim accrues “when the plaintiff is injured by fnal agency action.” Ante, at 804. The majority maintains that the text of § 2401(a) demands this result. But if that answer is so obvious, one wonders why no court proclaimed it until more than 75 years after all the statutory pieces were in place.
To explain how the majority got this ruling wrong, I fnd it necessary to provide the right answer. Here, the relevant statutory text is the catchall limitations provision for suits brought against the United States: § 2401(a) of Title 28 of the United States Code. All agree that there are two key terms in that provision—“accrues” and “the right of action.” Ibid. The majority misreads both. Contrary to the Court's rigid reading, the word “accrues” lacks any fxed meaning. See Crown Coat, 386 U. S., at 517. Instead, the meaning of accrue for the purpose of a statute of limitations is determined by the particular “right of action” at issue. For many kinds of legal claims, accrual is plaintiff specifc because the claims themselves are plaintiff specifc. But facial administrative- law claims are not. This means that, in the administrativeLinney's Pizza, LLC v. Board of Governors of FRS, 2023 WL 6050569, *2–*4 (ED Ky., Sept. 15, 2023).
CORNER POST, INC. v. BOARD OF GOVERNORS, FRS law context, the limitations period begins not when a plaintiff is injured, but when a rule is fnalized.
A
When sovereign immunity has been waived, the Federal Government is often sued, and Congress has enacted statutes of limitations to ensure that those lawsuits are brought in a timely fashion. Because such suits arise in different contexts, Congress has enacted different statutes of limitations for different types of suits.
Most statutes of limitations are context specifc. For example, a tort claim against the United States typically must be brought “within two years after such claim accrues.” 28 U. S. C. § 2401(b). By contrast, a party challenging certain administrative orders must seek review “within 60 days after [the order's] entry.” § 2344. Many more examples of context-specifc limitations periods in the U. S. Code abound. See, e. g., § 2501 (claims over which the United States Court of Federal Claims has jurisdiction must be brought within six years); 33 U. S. C. § 1369(b)(1) (challenges to certain standards adopted by the Environmental Protection Agency under the Clean Water Act must commence “within 120 days from the date of . . . promulgation”).
The statute at issue here—28 U. S. C. § 2401(a)—supplements those specific provisions.
In doing so, § 2401(a) serves a special purpose: to act as a catchall that imposes an outer time limit on claims brought against the United States when no other statute of limitations applies.
Under § 2401(a), “every civil action commenced against the United States shall be barred unless the complaint is fled within six years after the right of action frst accrues.” This catchall limitations statute has been applied in a range of contexts, including APA claims (like this one), contract claims, see Crown Coat, 386 U. S., at 510–511, and more, see, e. g., Natural Resources Defense Council v. Haaland, 102 F. 4th 1045, 1074 (CA9 2024) (claims under the Endangered Species Act).
Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication Consistent with the broad scope of its potential application, § 2401(a) uses broad language. It starts the 6-year clock when “the right of action frst accrues.” §2401(a).
No more elaboration or specifcity is given. So, what does the sparse text of § 2401(a) tell us?
To start, the statute tells us to look at when “the right of action frst accrues.” (Emphasis added.) The word “frst” directs us to start the clock at the earliest possible opportunity once the claim accrues. From the text alone, then, we know that this moment in time should happen sooner rather than later. But when that moment occurs depends on the meaning of both “the right of action” and “accrues.”
Next, the provision uses the unadorned phrase “the right of action.” Because this statute is applicable to a broad range of causes of action against the Government, the underlying statute (here the APA) provides “the right of action,” not § 2401(a) itself. Put another way, the § 2401(a) catchall applies to different causes of action, and those causes of action establish different legal claims. Though the right of action is not the same for an APA claim as it is for an Endangered Species Act claim, § 2401(a)'s broad “right of action” language applies to both of these claims, and more.
B
A proper understanding of the word “accrues” makes clear that this term is far more fexible and context dependent than the majority appreciates. Crucially, the Court has said this very thing before—more than once, in fact. We have long understood that it is simply not “possible to assign the word `accrued' any defnite technical meaning which by itself would enable us to say whether the statutory period begins to run at one time or the other.” Reading Co. v. Koons, 271 U. S. 58, 61–62 (1926); see also Crown Coat, 386 U. S., at 517 (recognizing “the hazards inherent in attempting to defne for all purposes when a `cause of action' frst `accrues' ”). But, for some reason, that does not stop the majority from trying here. Its opinion repeatedly asserts that the ordiPage Proof Pending Publication CORNER POST, INC. v. BOARD OF GOVERNORS, FRS nary meaning of accrual is that claims accrue only when a plaintiff can sue. See ante, at 809–813.3 But even the majority acknowledges that its preferred defnition of accrual is not universal; it is, at most, “the `standard rule' ” that “ `can be displaced.' ” Ante, at 811 (quoting Green v. Brennan, 578 U. S. 547, 554 (2016); emphasis added).
Far from imposing a one-size-fts-all defnition of the word “accrue,” this Court has traditionally taken a claim-specifc view: “[A] right accrues when it comes into existence.”
United States v. Lindsay, 346 U. S. 568, 569 (1954). For example, in McMahon v. United States, 342 U. S. 25 (1951), we held that, under the Suits in Admiralty Act, a claim accrued when a seaman was injured, even though he could not yet sue at that time. See id., at 27–28. In Crown Coat, we held the opposite—a claim brought under 28 U. S. C. § 1346 did not accrue at the time of injury, but rather at the moment of fnal administrative action, because a plaintiff could not sue until the agency action was fnal. See 386 U. S., at 513–514, 517–518. The point is not that these cases all point in one direction or the other with respect to the meaning of accrue. Instead, our cases illustrate what this Court has expressly stated: The term “accrued” lacks “any defnite technical meaning,” Reading, 271 U. S., at 61.
The majority nevertheless decrees today that accrual must always be plaintiff specifc—i. e., that a claim cannot accrue until “this particular plaintiff” can bring suit. Ante, at 817. But that is not what § 2401(a) says. It does not say that the clock starts when the plaintiffs right of action frst accrues; rather, § 2401(a) starts the clock when “the right of action 3The majority insists on a single defnition of “accrued,” but it cannot keep its story straight as to what that defnition is. Its opinion offers multiple formulations, stating that a claim accrues “when it comes into existence,” “when the plaintiff has a complete and present cause of action,” “when a suit may be maintained thereon,” and, also, “after the plaintiff suffers the injury.” Ante, at 810–811 (internal quotation marks omitted). These distinctions can make a difference.
frst accrues.” (Emphasis added.) In other words, the limitations provision here focuses on the claim being brought without regard for who brings it.
The dictionary defnitions on which the majority relies further highlight this important observation. A claim accrues, according to those defnitions, “ `when a suit may be maintained thereon' ” or upon the “ `coming or springing into existence of a right to sue.' ” Ante, at 810 (emphasis added) (frst quoting Black's Law Dictionary 37 (4th ed. 1951), then quoting Ballentine's Law Dictionary 15 (2d ed. 1948)).
Again, and notably, these dictionaries speak of a right to sue, not the plaintiff's right to sue. Like § 2401(a) itself, these defnitions do not support the majority's assertion that accrual is necessarily plaintiff specifc.
Of course, many of our cases do say that a claim accrues when “ `the plaintiff has a complete and present cause of action.' ” E. g., Gabelli v. SEC, 568 U. S. 442, 448 (2013); Wal lace v. Kato, 549 U. S. 384, 388 (2007); Graham County Soil & Water Conservation Dist. v. United States ex rel. Wilson, 545 U. S. 409, 418 (2005); Bay Area Laundry and Dry Clean ing Pension Trust Fund v. Ferbar Corp. of Cal., 522 U. S. 192, 201 (1997). But those statements were made in the context of particular cases, each of which dealt with plaintiff- specifc causes of action. See, e. g., Gabelli, 568 U. S., at 446 (civil enforcement claim by the Securities and Exchange Commission); Wallace, 549 U. S., at 388 (false imprisonment and arrest claims); Graham County, 545 U. S., at 412 (retaliation claim against an employer); Bay Area Laundry, 522 U. S., at 195 (claim alleging failure to make required payments to employee pension funds).
Here is what I mean by this. When a complaint brought against a defendant asserts, “You falsely imprisoned me,” or “You retaliated against me,” it is making a legal claim that is specifc to the particular plaintiff. But, as discussed below, it is not similarly plaintiff specifc to bring a claim saying, for example, that a particular regulation is invalid Page Proof Pending Publication CORNER POST, INC. v. BOARD OF GOVERNORS, FRS because it “exceeds the Board's statutory authority,” or because the Government “failed to consider important aspects of the problem,” as the complaint here alleges. App. to Pet. for Cert. 80, 82. So, while accrual may sometimes—even usually—be plaintiff specifc, that is just because underlying legal claims are often plaintiff specifc. The precedents the majority cites never say otherwise; i.e., they do not tell us that accrual must always be plaintiff specifc.
The majority's other hard-and-fast distinction—between statutes of limitations and statutes of repose—fares no better. See ante, at 812–813. The majority sets up a dichotomy: Statutes of limitations are plaintiff-centric rules that “ `require plaintiffs to pursue diligent prosecution of known claims,' ” while statutes of repose emphasize fnality and are tied to “ `the last culpable act or omission of the defendant.' ” Ante, at 812 (quoting CTS Corp. v. Waldburger, 573 U. S. 1, 8 (2014)). The problem is that statutes of limitations and statutes of repose, while different, are not nearly as different as the majority imagines. It is true that statutes of repose are considered to be “defendant-protective.” Ante, at 813. But the same is true of statutes of limitations. “The very purpose of a period of limitation is that there may be, at some defnitely ascertainable period, an end to litigation.” Reading, 271 U. S., at 65; see also Gabelli, 568 U. S., at 448 (repose is a “ `basic polic[y] of all limitations provisions' ”). In fact, according to one of the dictionaries the majority cites, “[s]tatutes of limitation are statutes of repose.” Black's Law Dictionary, at 1077 (emphasis added). The difference is that unlike statutes of repose, statutes of limitations have more than one purpose: they bring fnality for defendants and prevent plaintiffs from sleeping on their rights. Understanding these dual functions sheds no light whatsoever on what to do when those competing purposes point in different directions.4 4Here, these purposes are at odds because repose favors starting the clock at the moment of fnal agency action, whereas a plaintiff-specifc limitations rule would be targeted at a plaintiff's injury to ensure plaintiffs Page Proof Pending Publication
III
Because different claims accrue at different times, we must look to the specifc types of claims that the plaintiffs have brought and consider the context in which the limitations period operates. “Cases under [one statute] do not necessarily rule . . . claims” brought under another. Crown Coat, 386 U. S., at 517. And our understanding of accrual for limitations purposes has always been context specifc.
See, e. g., Wallace, 549 U. S., at 389 (relying on torts treatises to explain the “distinctive rule” for commencement of limitations period for false imprisonment suits); Franconia Asso ciates v. United States, 536 U. S. 129, 142–144 (2002) (citing contracts treatises to explain that contract claims accrue at the moment of breach); Merck & Co. v. Reynolds, 559 U. S. 633, 644–646 (2010) (applying fraud-specifc discovery rule to determine accrual). In other words, to understand when “the right of action” accrues under § 2401(a), we must understand what the right of action is.
A
The right of action that is invoked in many administrative- law cases, including this one, is a statutory claim that an agency has violated certain legal requirements when it took a certain action, such that the agency's action itself is invalid. See, e. g., 5 U. S. C. § 706(2). And Congress has repeatedly made clear, through various statutory enactments, that in the administrative-law context, the statute of limitations for fling a claim that seeks to invalidate the agency action runs from the moment of fnal agency action.
Take the Administrative Orders Review Act (also known as the Hobbs Act), for example. See 28 U. S. C. § 2342.
That statute is the exclusive mechanism for reviewing cerdon't sleep on their rights. In the administrative-law context, one has to choose between those objectives; no one rule can equally achieve both of these ends.
Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication CORNER POST, INC. v. BOARD OF GOVERNORS, FRS tain orders issued by over a half-dozen federal agencies.
The Act requires suits to be brought “within 60 days after [the] entry” of any fnal agency order. § 2344. There are many other similar statutes. In its brief, the Government provided us with more than two dozen statutory provisions where the limitations period starts running at the moment of fnal agency action—whether that action is the publication of a rule, or the issuance of an order, or something else. See Brief for Respondent 15–17, and n. 4. And, as the Government itself acknowledges, even that list is not comprehensive. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 51 (“Candidly, we got to a page- long footnote and stopped”).5 5No kidding. On top of the dozens of examples that the Government provided, there are many, many others. See, e. g., 5 U. S. C. § 7703(b)(1)(A) (“[A] petition to review a fnal order or fnal decision of the [Merit Systems Protection] Board shall be fled . . . within 60 days after the Board issues notice of the fnal order or decision of the Board”); 15 U. S. C. § 80b–13(a) (“Any person or party aggrieved by an order issued by the [Securities and Exchange] Commission under this subchapter may obtain a review of such order . . . by fling . . . within sixty days after the entry of such order, a written petition”); 30 U. S. C. § 1276(a)(2) (“Any [covered] order or decision . . . shall be subject to judicial review on or before 30 days from the date of such order or decision”); 38 U. S. C. § 7266(a) (“[T]o obtain review . . . of a fnal decision of the Board of Veterans' Appeals, a person adversely affected by such decision shall fle a notice of appeal with the Court within 120 days after the date on which notice of the decision is issued”); 42 U. S. C. § 405(g) (“Any individual, after any fnal decision of the Commissioner of Social Security made after a hearing to which he was a party . . . may obtain a review of such decision by a civil action commenced within sixty days after the mailing to him of notice of such decision”); § 1395oo(f)(1) (“Providers shall have the right to obtain judicial review of any fnal decision of the [Provider Reimbursement Review] Board . . . by a civil action commenced within 60 days of the date on which notice of any fnal decision by the Board . . . is received”); § 7607(b)(1) (“Any petition for review under this subsection shall be fled within sixty days from the date notice of such promulgation, approval, or action appears in the Federal Register, except that if such petition is based solely on grounds arising after such sixtieth day, then any petition for review under this subsection shall be fled within sixty days after such grounds arise”); 49 U. S. C. § 1153(b)(1) (petitions seeking review of National Transportation Safety Despite the dozens of statutes that start the limitations period at the moment of fnal agency action, neither Corner Post nor the majority identifes a single statute in the administrative-law context—either now or before 1948—that takes any other approach. This tells us exactly the message that Congress might have expected courts to infer when interpreting § 2401(a): For administrative-law actions, a claim accrues at the moment of fnal agency action.
The Court says we must ignore these other statutes because they post-date Congress's 1948 enactment of § 2401(a). See ante, at 815–817. The majority's reasoning is doubly wrong. First, it is wrong on the facts. Even before 1948, Congress consistently started limitations periods in the administrative-law context at the moment of the last agency action.6 Then, as now, Congress decided that the deadline for reviewing agency actions should be pegged to the action Board orders that relate to aviation matters “must be fled not later than 60 days after the order is issued”).
6See, e. g., 42 Stat. 162 (1921) (codifed at 7 U. S. C. § 194(a)) (meatpackers must appeal agency orders within 30 days after service of order); 48 Stat. 1093 (1934) (codifed as amended at 47 U. S. C. § 402(c)) (Federal Communications Commission orders must be challenged in court “within twenty days after the decision complained of is effective”); 49 Stat. 860 (1935) (codifed at 16 U. S. C. § 825l(b)) (orders issued by the Federal Power Commission pursuant to the Public Utility Act of 1935 must be challenged in court “within sixty days after the order of the Commission”); 49 Stat. 980 (1935) (codifed at 27 U. S. C. § 204(h)) (orders related to alcohol permits must be challenged “within sixty days after the entry of such order”); 52 Stat. 112 (1938) (codifed at 15 U. S. C. § 45) (Federal Trade Commission cease-and-desist orders must be challenged “within sixty days from the date of the service of such order”); 52 Stat. 831 (1938) (codifed at 15 U. S. C. § 717r(b)) (orders issued by the Federal Power Commission pursuant to the Natural Gas Act must be challenged in court “within sixty days after the order of the Commission”); 52 Stat. 1053 (1938) (codifed at 21 U. S. C. § 355(h)) (orders related to new drug applications must be challenged in court “within sixty days after the entry of such order”); 54 Stat. 501 (1940) (orders apportioning costs for certain bridge projects must be challenged in court “within three months after the date such order is issued”).
Page Proof Pending Publication CORNER POST, INC. v. BOARD OF GOVERNORS, FRS under review. Second, the majority misses the broader point: Whenever Congress imposes a deadline to challenge an agency decision, the limitations period always starts at the moment of the last agency action. We should pay attention to the uniformly expressed judgment of Congress, and read § 2401(a) accordingly.
Somehow, the majority draws the opposite conclusion. In its view, either Congress's consistently expressed intention is irrelevant to what § 2401(a) means, or Congress's failure to explicitly express that intention in the text of § 2401(a) indicates that Congress decided otherwise in this particular statute (after all, Congress could have expressly pegged accrual to fnal agency action in § 2401(a) but did not do so). See ante, at 811–813.7 But mechanically drawing these sorts of negative inferences when interpreting statutes can be risky. “Context counts, and it is sometimes diffcult to read much into the absence of a word that is present elsewhere in a statute.” Bartenwerfer v. Buckley, 598 U. S. 69, 78 (2023).
The majority's approach overlooks relevant context in all sorts of ways, including the fact that § 2401(a) is a catchall provision that applies to a variety of actions—that is, the language we are interpreting here does not apply only in the administrative-law context. It applies to every suit against the United States not covered by another statute of limitations. One cannot expect for Congress to have explicitly stated that accrual in § 2401(a) starts at the point of fnal agency action when § 2401(a) is a residual provision that also applies to claims that do not involve agency action at all.8 7The majority criticizes my review of congressional action in this area, but fails to adequately explore the record itself. Ante, at 815–817. The majority's conclusion that the accrual rule is plaintiff specifc for APA claims is no more than ipse dixit.
8Contra the majority, see ante, at 817, the fact that Congress could have opted to enact a specifc statutory review provision for APA claims says nothing about how we should apply the catchall review provision here. Page Proof Pending Publication Frankly, it was also entirely unnecessary for Congress to be explicit regarding its intentions.
Again, in the administrative-law context, the consistent rule is not the plaintiff-specifc accrual rule that exists in other contexts (e. g., torts), but the rule that applies every time Congress has ever mentioned a limitations period with respect to a suit against an agency: The claim accrues at the moment of fnal agency action. So it is no wonder that Congress did not expressly mention this in the text of § 2401(a)—it did not have to, for those who have a basic understanding of its statutes.
What is more, the standard accrual rule for the administrative-law context makes perfect sense. The APA itself focuses on the agency's action, not on the plaintiff. Section 704 subjects certain “agency action[s]” to judicial review. Section 706 lays out the scope of judicial review. As relevant here, courts shall “hold unlawful and set aside agency action” that is “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5 U. S. C. § 706(2)(A).
Other subsections of § 706 likewise focus exclusively on what the agency did. Did the agency act “in excess of statutory jurisdiction”? § 706(2)(C). Did the agency act “without observance of procedure required by law”? § 706(2)(D).
Section 702 is not to the contrary. The majority suggests otherwise, characterizing § 702 as “equip[ping] injured parties with a cause of action.” Ante, at 808. This is a misleading characterization. Section 702 restricts who may challenge agency action: only those “person[s] suffering legal wrong because of agency action, or adversely affected or aggrieved by agency action.” It is simply a limitation on who can sue. As such, it says nothing about the cause of action that such a person might bring, nor does it establish that an injury is an element of the claim, as the majority mistakenly suggests.9 And that is for good reason, since, in administrative 9The majority puts too much stock in the fact that § 702 references an injury: That reference actually does no more than highlight the distinction between what constitutes a claim and who can bring that claim. See ante, Page Proof Pending Publication CORNER POST, INC. v. BOARD OF GOVERNORS, FRS actions, the claim itself remains focused on the agency. See Crown Coat, 386 U. S., at 513 (“The focus of the court action is the validity of the administrative decision”).
The way that courts review agency actions also reinforces this basic observation. Courts do not look at what happened to the plaintiff or what happened after the rulemaking—they look only at the rule and the rulemaking process itself. See SEC v. Chenery Corp., 318 U. S. 80, 95 (1943). “[T]he focal point for judicial review should be the administrative record already in existence, not some new record made initially in the reviewing court.” Camp v. Pitts, 411 U. S. 138, 142 (1973) (per curiam). Anything that happened after the rule's publication (including, perhaps, some injury to a regulated party) does not matter to an APA claim. So, the available claims, causes of action, and evidence are the same regardless of who brings the challenge or when they bring it. Again, the complaint in this case proves the point. Before Corner Post was added as a plaintiff, the complaint alleged that (1) Regulation II is contrary to law and exceeds the Board's statutory authority, and (2) Regulation II is arbitrary and capricious. See Complaint in North Dakota Re- at 807–808, and n. 1. This type of distinction is commonplace in many areas of our jurisprudence. Take, for example, the constitutional standing doctrine, which limits eligible plaintiffs to those who have suffered an injury in fact that is both traceable to the defendant's conduct and redress- able in court. See FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, 602 U. S. 367, 380–385 (2024). Whether a particular plaintiff has standing to sue says nothing about the elements of the claim itself. See Haaland v. Brackeen, 599 U. S. 255, 291 (2023) (“We do not reach the merits of these claims because no party before the Court has standing to raise them”). The distinction between what a claim is and who can bring it applies with full force here. Section 702 codifes an injury requirement for bringing APA claims. Whether a particular plaintiff was “adversely affected or aggrieved by agency action within the meaning of a relevant statute” under § 702 is a threshold inquiry about whether she is an appropriate plaintiff; it has no bearing on whether the agency did, in fact, act in a manner that was “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law,” § 706(2)(A).
Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication tail Assn. v. Board of Governors of FRS, No. 1:21–cv–00095 (D ND), ECF Doc. 1, pp. 32–36. After Corner Post was added as a plaintiff, the complaint made exactly those same two legal claims. See App. to Pet. for Cert. 79–84. Before Corner Post was added, the contrary-to-law claim said that the Board considered impermissible costs and capped interchange fees in a way that was not proportional to the specifc costs of each transaction. See ECF Doc. 1, at 32–34. After Corner Post was added, the contrary-to-law claim said the exact same thing. See App. to Pet. for Cert. 79–81. Before the addition of Corner Post, the arbitrary-and-capricious claim said that the Board failed to consider certain congressional instructions, relied on factors that Congress did not intend for it to consider, and ran counter to evidence before the Board. See ECF Doc. 1, at 34–36. Those claims, too, were unchanged after the addition of Corner Post. See App. to Pet. for Cert. 82–84.
From the pleadings fled in this case, three observations stand out. First, these APA claims, like all APA claims, are about what the agency itself did, so the logical point to start the clock is the moment the agency acted. Second, the claims that Corner Post brings are not specifc to it—they are identical to the untimely claims the coplaintiff trade groups brought before. And, fnally, although the majority puts procedural challenges to the side—asserting that its holding does not extend to those, see ante, at 821, n. 8— the claims in this case are procedural, so the majority's line- drawing exercise is meaningless.
B
On the matter of congressional intent, the consistent accrual rule in the administrative-law context (the limitations period starts running at the time of the fnal agency action) is patently superior to the majority's reading of § 2401(a). Congress enacts statutes of limitations to achieve basic policy goals: “repose, elimination of stale claims, and certainty CORNER POST, INC. v. BOARD OF GOVERNORS, FRS about a plaintiff's opportunity for recovery and a defendant's potential liabilities.” Rotella v. Wood, 528 U. S. 549, 555 (2000); see also Gabelli, 568 U. S., at 448. For APA claims, where rulemakings apply to the public writ large, repose and certainty would never exist if any and every newly formed entity can challenge every agency regulation in existence. Stated simply, the majority has adopted an implausible reading of § 2401(a), because, as I explain below, a plaintiff- specifc accrual rule operating in this context undermines each of the central goals of all limitations provisions.
First, repose. This principle means that, at some point, litigation must end. Under the majority's reading of the statute, it never will. Instead of putting a stop to things after six years, § 2401(a) now does nothing to prevent agency rules from being forever subjected to legal challenge by newly formed entities (or, as this case illustrates, by old entities that can fnd or create new entities to graft onto their complaint).10 Second, elimination of stale claims. The majority forces courts and agencies to parse cold administrative records.
Long after the action in question, courts may be ill equipped to review decades-old administrative explanations.
Last, certainty. As I explain in Part IV, infra, the majority's approach creates uncertainty for the Government and every entity that relies on the Government to function.
Agency rulemaking serves important “notice and predictability purposes.” Talk America, Inc. v. Michigan Bell Telephone Co., 564 U. S. 50, 69 (2011) (Scalia, J., concurring). When an administrative agency changes its own rules, it follows specifc, established processes, so parties have some predictability about how the rules of the road might change. 10The fact that “courts entertaining later challenges often will be able to rely on binding Supreme Court or circuit precedent,” ante, at 824, is irrelevant. What we are deciding now is how the statute of limitations should be interpreted, and more specifcally, whether it makes sense to interpret it in a way that is inconsistent with the purpose of such statutes. Page Proof Pending Publication But when every rule on the books can perpetually be challenged by any new plaintiff, and is thus subject to limitless ad hoc amendment, no policy determination can ever be put to rest, and certainty about the rules that govern will forever remain elusive.
IV
Today's ruling is not only baseless. It is also extraordinarily consequential. In one fell swoop, the Court has effectively eliminated any limitations period for APA lawsuits, despite Congress's unmistakable policy determination to cut off such suits within six years of the fnal agency action. The Court has decided that the clock starts for limitations purposes whenever a new regulated entity is created. This means that, from this day forward, administrative agencies can be sued in perpetuity over every fnal decision they make.
The majority's ruling makes legal challenges to decades- old agency decisions fair game, even though courts of appeals had previously applied § 2401(a) to fnd untimely a range of belated APA challenges. For example, a lower court rejected an APA challenge to the Food and Drug Administration's approval of the abortion medication mifepristone that was brought more than two decades after the relevant agency action. See Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. FDA, 78 F. 4th 210, 242 (CA5 2023). A 2008 APA challenge to a 1969 ruling by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives implementing the Gun Control Act was also bounced on statute of limitations grounds. See Hire Order Ltd. v. Marianos, 698 F. 3d 168, 170 (CA4 2012). Other unquestionably tardy APA suits have been dismissed on similar grounds too.11 11See, e. g., Alabama v. PCI Gaming Auth., 801 F. 3d 1278, 1292 (CA11 2015) (2013 challenge to Secretary of Interior's 1984, 1992, and 1995 decisions to take certain land into trust for tribes); Wong v. Doar, 571 F. 3d 247, 263 (CA2 2009) (2007 challenge to 1980 Medicaid regulation); Dunn- McCampbell Royalty Interest, Inc. v. National Park Serv., 112 F. 3d 1283, Page Proof Pending Publication CORNER POST, INC. v. BOARD OF GOVERNORS, FRS No more. After today, even the most well-settled agency regulations can be placed on the chopping block. And please take note: The fallout will not stop with new challenges to old rules involving the most contentious issues of today. Any established government regulation about any issue—say, workplace safety, toxic waste, or consumer protection—can now be attacked by any new regulated entity within six years of the entity's formation. A brand new entity could pop up and challenge a regulation that is decades old; perhaps even one that is as old as the APA itself. No matter how entrenched, heavily relied upon, or central to the functioning of our society a rule is, the majority has announced open season.
Still, in issuing its ruling in this case, the Court seems oddly oblivious to the most foreseeable consequence of the accrual rule it is adopting: Giving every new entity in a regulated industry its own personal statute of limitations to challenge longstanding regulations affects our Nation's economy. Why? Because administrative agencies establish the baseline rules around which businesses and individuals order their lives. When an agency publishes a fnal rule, and the period for challenging that rule passes, people in that industry understand that the agency's policy choice is the law and act accordingly. They make investments because of it.
They change their practices because of it. They enter contracts in light of it. They may not like the rule, but they live and work with it, because that is what the Rule of Law requires. It is profoundly destabilizing—and also acutely unfair—to permit newcomers to bring legal challenges that can overturn settled regulations long after the rest of the competitive marketplace has adapted itself to the regulatory environment.
1286–1287 (CA5 1997) (1994 challenge to 1979 National Park Service regulations); Shiny Rock Mining Corp. v. United States, 906 F. 2d 1362, 1365– 1366 (CA9 1990) (1984 challenges to 1964 and 1965 land management orders).
Page Proof Pending Publication Moreover, as I have explained, the Court's ruling in this case allows for every new entity to challenge any and every rule that an agency has ever adopted. It is extraordinarily presumptuous that an entity formed in full view of an agency's rules, by founders who can choose to enter the industry or not, can demand that well-established rules of engagement be revisited. But even setting aside those commonsense fairness concerns, the constant churn of potential attacks on an agency's rules by new entrants can harm all entities in a regulated industry. At any time, anyone can come along and potentially cause every entity to have to adjust its whole operations manual, since any rule (no matter how well settled) might be subject to alteration. Indeed, the obvious need for stability in the rules that govern an industry is precisely why a defned period for challenging the rules was needed at all.
Knowledgeable amici have explained that the majority's approach to accrual of the statute of limitations for APA claims undermines the “[s]tability, predictability, and consistency [that] enable[s] small businesses to survive and thrive.” Brief for Small Business Associations as Amici Curiae 5.
And there is no question that long-term uncertainty “hinders the ability of businesses to plan effectively.” Id., at 9. The majority's accrual rule unnecessarily creates “frequent, inconsistent, judicially-driven policy changes that do not involve the sort of careful balancing envisioned in the normal process of regulatory change.” Id., at 12. And, again, one might think that preventing such chaos is precisely why Congress enacted a statute of limitations in the frst place.
Seeking to minimize the fully foreseeable and potentially devastating impact of its ruling, the majority maintains that there is nothing to see here, because not every lawsuit brought by a new industry upstart will win, and, at any rate, many agency regulations are already subject to challenge. See ante, at 823–824. But this myopic rationalization overlooks other signifcant changes that this Court has wrought this Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication CORNER POST, INC. v. BOARD OF GOVERNORS, FRS Term with respect to the longstanding rules governing review of agency actions. The discerning reader will know that the Court has handed down other decisions this Term that likewise invite and enable a wave of regulatory challenges—decisions that carry with them the possibility that well-established agency rules will be upended in ways that were previously unimaginable. Doctrines that were once settled are now unsettled, and claims that lacked merit a year ago are suddenly up for grabs.
In Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, 603 U. S. 369 (2024), for example, the Court has reneged on a blackletter rule of administrative law that had been foundational for the last four decades. Id., at 412–413. Under that prior interpretive doctrine, courts deferred to agency interpretations of ambiguous statutes that Congress authorized the agency to administer. Now, every legal claim conceived of in those last four decades—and before—can possibly be brought before courts newly unleashed from the constraints of any such deference. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 74 (Assistant to the Solicitor General explaining that this result “would magnify the effect of” overruling Chevron).
Put differently, a fxed statute of limitations, running from the agency's action, was one barrier to the chaotic upending of settled agency rules; the requirement that deference be given to an agency's reasonable interpretations concerning its statutory authority to issue rules was another. The Court has now eliminated both. Any new objection to any old rule must be entertained and determined de novo by judges who can now apply their own unfettered judgment as to whether the rule should be voided.
* * * At the end of a momentous Term, this much is clear: The tsunami of lawsuits against agencies that the Court's holdings in this case and Loper Bright have authorized has the potential to devastate the functioning of the Federal GovernPage Proof Pending Publication ment. Even more to the present point, that result simply cannot be what Congress intended when it enacted legislation that stood up and funded federal agencies and vested them with authority to set the ground rules for the individuals and entities that participate in our economy and our society. It is utterly inconceivable that § 2401(a)'s statute of limitations was meant to permit fresh attacks on settled regulations from all new comers forever. Yet, that is what the majority holds today.
But Congress still has a chance to address this absurdity and forestall the coming chaos. It can opt to correct this Court's mistake by clarifying that the statutes it enacts are designed to facilitate the functioning of agencies, not to hobble them. In particular, Congress can amend § 2401(a), or enact a specifc review provision for APA claims, to state explicitly what any such rule must mean if it is to operate as a limitations period in this context: Regulated entities have six years from the date of the agency action to bring a lawsuit seeking to have it changed or invalidated; after that, facial challenges must end. By doing this, Congress can make clear that lawsuits bringing facial claims against agencies are not personal attack vehicles for new entities created just for that purpose. So, while the Court has made a mess of this pivotal statute, and the consequences are profound, “the ball is in Congress' court.” Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 550 U. S. 618, 661 (2007) (Ginsburg, J., dissenting).
Page Proof Pending Publication Reporter’s Note The attached opinion has been revised to refect the usual publication and citation style of the United States Reports. The revised pagination makes available the offcial United States Reports citation in advance of publication. The syllabus has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader and constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court. A list of counsel who argued or fled briefs in this case, and who were members of the bar of this Court at the time this case was argued, has been inserted following the syllabus. Other revisions may include adjustments to formatting, captions, citation form, and any errant punctuation. The following additional edits were made: p. 803, line 30: the second “in which” is deleted p. 810, line 5: “commenced” is inserted after “action” p. 865, line 5: “the” is deleted