The U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of International Affairs is now accepting applications for its 2026-2028 cohort of Junior Fellows. The Junior Fellowship program is a highly selective, fixed two-year program for recent college graduates to work shaping international economic policy for the United States.
To apply, email a cover letter, resume, one recommendation letter, and transcript(s) attesting to academic qualifications and career goals to IAFellows@treasury.gov by October 31, 2025. Students from all academic backgrounds are encouraged to apply. In the email, candidates must also (A) indicate a desired start date; (B) confirm they hold U.S. citizenship (must be able to provide documentation); (C) note veterans’ preference, if applicable; and (D) include a resume that demonstrates 52 weeks (2,080 hours) of paid or unpaid work, volunteer, or extracurricular experiences – all of which must be relevant in some way to the duties described above.
Candidates passing a first round of screening will be asked to respond to two short essay questions. Applications will be evaluated in December 2025 for Fellows to start in summer of 2026 (or at a mutually agreed alternative time).
To learn more about the Junior Fellowship program from current Junior Fellows, register for one of the virtual information sessions linked below.
All Information Sessions will run from 8:00pm to 9:00pm (Eastern Time US and Canada)
Info Session 03: Tuesday, Oct 14
About the Program:
The Junior Fellowship program is a highly selective, fixed two-year program for new college graduates to work shaping international economic policy for the United States in Treasury’s Office of International Affairs. Throughout the Fellowship, junior fellows perform a variety of tasks that include developing policy proposals and conducting research and analysis on pressing international economic and financial developments. Fellows also support bilateral and multilateral meetings for senior Treasury officials engaging counterparts at the IMF, World Bank, G7, and G20 – to name a few. Junior fellows often participate in such meetings and may have opportunities to travel abroad. The program exposes fellows to multiple policy issues and provides opportunities to enhance their knowledge and skills including in writing, research, oral briefing, and economic policy and statecraft.
Junior fellows will be placed in either a regional or functional office. Regional offices oversee Treasury’s engagement with counterpart finance ministries and treasuries across the world. Functional offices oversee Treasury’s engagement with international financial institutions and structure broader Treasury policy on issues ranging from trade, to export credits, to foreign exchange.
Junior fellows are usually hired at the GS-9 level and receive standard Treasury benefits. Following the program, fellows have pursued a range of opportunities, including employment at Treasury and elsewhere in the U.S. government, work in the private sector, and graduate study (e.g., law, public policy, international relations, and finance and business).