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The Gold Trump Phone Still Doesn't Exist, But You Can Reserve One

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 hours ago
Trump Mobile promised American-made gold smartphones last year. Neither the gold color nor the American manufacturing materialized, and the company is now blaming government shutdowns for delays stretching into 2026.

A Golden Promise Gets Tarnished

When the Trump Organization announced Trump Mobile back in June 2025, the pitch was straightforward: American-made smartphones, including a gold-colored flagship model called the T1. It was the kind of promise that aligned perfectly with Donald Trump's longstanding criticism of tech companies manufacturing overseas.

Fast forward to today, and neither promise has materialized. The made-in-America claim got quietly revised, and those gold phones? They're nowhere to be found.

According to a Financial Times report, customer service representatives at Trump Mobile are blaming the government shutdown for delays in delivering the T1 gold smartphone. The timeline has shifted from an original August 2025 launch to the end of 2025, and now into 2026. That's a lot of moving goalposts for a phone you can currently reserve with a $100 deposit.

From Made In America To Brought To Life In America

The manufacturing claims have undergone their own transformation. Trump Mobile walked back the "made in America" promise earlier this year, replacing it with the notably vaguer phrase "brought to life in the United States." It's the kind of linguistic gymnastics that leaves you wondering what exactly that means.

The irony here is hard to miss. Trump Mobile was announced when Donald Trump, the 45th and 47th president, was actively criticizing Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Samsung for not making their devices domestically. The company's phone plans even cost $47.45 per month as a tribute to those presidential terms.

What You Can Actually Buy Right Now

While customers wait for the mythical gold T1, Trump Mobile is selling something much more conventional: refurbished phones from the very companies the president criticized. The website currently offers renewed Samsung and Apple devices at these prices:

  • Samsung S24 Renewed: $459
  • Samsung S23 Renewed: $369
  • iPhone 15 Renewed: $629
  • iPhone 14 Renewed: $489

The company also lets customers bring their own existing phones to the service. Trump Mobile advertises "All-American performance" at an "everyday price," though exactly what makes refurbished Samsung and Apple devices particularly American remains unclear.

Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump announced the phone company in June, with President Trump not officially involved in the launch. MarketDash reached out to the Trump Organization for comment but did not receive a response. The company also declined to share how many customers it currently has or how many refurbished devices have been sold.

For now, anyone who put down a $100 deposit for a gold T1 smartphone will need to keep waiting. Maybe 2026 will be the year those golden promises finally get delivered.

The Gold Trump Phone Still Doesn't Exist, But You Can Reserve One

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 hours ago
Trump Mobile promised American-made gold smartphones last year. Neither the gold color nor the American manufacturing materialized, and the company is now blaming government shutdowns for delays stretching into 2026.

A Golden Promise Gets Tarnished

When the Trump Organization announced Trump Mobile back in June 2025, the pitch was straightforward: American-made smartphones, including a gold-colored flagship model called the T1. It was the kind of promise that aligned perfectly with Donald Trump's longstanding criticism of tech companies manufacturing overseas.

Fast forward to today, and neither promise has materialized. The made-in-America claim got quietly revised, and those gold phones? They're nowhere to be found.

According to a Financial Times report, customer service representatives at Trump Mobile are blaming the government shutdown for delays in delivering the T1 gold smartphone. The timeline has shifted from an original August 2025 launch to the end of 2025, and now into 2026. That's a lot of moving goalposts for a phone you can currently reserve with a $100 deposit.

From Made In America To Brought To Life In America

The manufacturing claims have undergone their own transformation. Trump Mobile walked back the "made in America" promise earlier this year, replacing it with the notably vaguer phrase "brought to life in the United States." It's the kind of linguistic gymnastics that leaves you wondering what exactly that means.

The irony here is hard to miss. Trump Mobile was announced when Donald Trump, the 45th and 47th president, was actively criticizing Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Samsung for not making their devices domestically. The company's phone plans even cost $47.45 per month as a tribute to those presidential terms.

What You Can Actually Buy Right Now

While customers wait for the mythical gold T1, Trump Mobile is selling something much more conventional: refurbished phones from the very companies the president criticized. The website currently offers renewed Samsung and Apple devices at these prices:

  • Samsung S24 Renewed: $459
  • Samsung S23 Renewed: $369
  • iPhone 15 Renewed: $629
  • iPhone 14 Renewed: $489

The company also lets customers bring their own existing phones to the service. Trump Mobile advertises "All-American performance" at an "everyday price," though exactly what makes refurbished Samsung and Apple devices particularly American remains unclear.

Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump announced the phone company in June, with President Trump not officially involved in the launch. MarketDash reached out to the Trump Organization for comment but did not receive a response. The company also declined to share how many customers it currently has or how many refurbished devices have been sold.

For now, anyone who put down a $100 deposit for a gold T1 smartphone will need to keep waiting. Maybe 2026 will be the year those golden promises finally get delivered.

    The Gold Trump Phone Still Doesn't Exist, But You Can Reserve One - MarketDash News