Quick Answer: What This Section Does

§ 147.18 establishes the investigative standards used to build your security clearance record.

It defines who is investigated and what baseline procedures apply—but it also allows agencies to go beyond those standards when concerns arise.

👉 In practice, this means your investigation is not limited to a fixed checklist—it can expand based on what is discovered.


What This Means in Practice

Most people assume the background investigation follows a set scope.

This section makes clear that it does not.

While it sets a baseline for:

  • how investigations are conducted

  • who is subject to them

  • what level of inquiry applies

it also explicitly allows agencies to:

👉 expand the investigation whenever an issue needs to be resolved

This is critical.

Because what ultimately reaches an adjudicator is not just:

👉 what was required to be collected

But:

👉 everything that was uncovered and documented along the way

To understand how this fits into the broader system, see the

Security Clearance Insiders Resource Hub


Full Text of § 147.18

§ 147.18 Introduction

The following investigative standards are established for all United States Government civilian and military personnel, consultants, contractors, employees of contractors, licensees, certificate holders or grantees and their employees and other individuals who require access to classified information, to include Sensitive Compartmented Information and Special Access Programs, and are to be used by government departments and agencies as the investigative basis for final clearance determinations.

However, nothing in these standards prohibits an agency from using any lawful investigative procedures in addition to these requirements in order to resolve any issue identified in the course of a background investigation or reinvestigation.


How This Section Fits Into the Clearance Process

This section sits at the beginning of the investigative standards framework.

It governs:

👉 how your file is created—not how your case is decided

That distinction matters.

Because adjudicators can only evaluate:

👉 what investigators document

And investigators are allowed to:

👉 go beyond baseline requirements to explore any concern

This is why investigations often expand into areas applicants did not expect.

To see how this connects to adjudication, review the

Adjudicative Guidelines

and the

security clearance process guide


Related Statutes and Guidance

Return to the full statute list in the Security Clearance Statutes and Regulations resource page, or explore how these rules are applied in practice in the Security Clearance Lawyers Resource Center.


Why This Matters for Your Case

This section explains something most applicants do not realize:

👉 your clearance case is shaped during the investigation

Not just at adjudication.

If an issue:

  • is unclear

  • raises follow-up questions

  • appears inconsistent

then investigators can expand their inquiry.

That expanded investigation becomes:

👉 part of your permanent record

And that record is what adjudicators rely on.


Why Insight Into the System Matters

Security clearance decisions are not made in a vacuum.

They are made by:

  • adjudicators
  • administrative judges
  • agency decision-makers
  • reviewers who rely on the written record

Understanding how these individuals evaluate risk, credibility, and mitigation is not theoretical—it is structural.

At National Security Law Firm, our security clearance lawyers include attorneys who have worked:

  • as administrative judges and adjudicators responsible for deciding clearance cases
  • inside federal agencies evaluating whether individuals should be approved or denied
  • within military legal systems handling sensitive national security matters
  • in roles directly applying the adjudicative guidelines to real-world cases

Our cases are not handled by a single attorney working in isolation.

They are reviewed through our internal Attorney Review Board, where multiple experienced attorneys analyze the record, test arguments, and refine strategy before submission.

This mirrors how the government evaluates cases—through layered review and institutional scrutiny.

Clients often come to us after receiving advice that focuses only on:

  • legal arguments
  • explanations of past conduct

But security clearance cases are not decided that way.

They are decided based on:

👉 how the record will be read, reused, and defended by decision-makers

That is the difference between a response that explains—and a record that supports approval.

You can read what clients say about their experience working with our team in our 4.9-star Google reviews, which reflect both outcomes and the level of strategic guidance we provide throughout the process.


Speak With a Security Clearance Lawyer Before the Investigation Expands

The most important question is not:

👉 “What will they ask?”

It is:

👉 “What will they document—and how will that be interpreted later?”

We offer free, confidential consultations to help you:

  • understand how the investigation may unfold

  • identify potential areas of expansion

  • respond in a way that protects your record

schedule a free consultation


The Record Controls the Case.

SECURITY CLEARANCE DENIED OR REVOKED

If you are appealing a security clearance determination, it is imperative that you obtain experienced legal representation. Doing so will provide you with the best opportunity to obtain or maintain your clearance.

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