Trump Mobile says its first-ever smartphone is delayed, and the government shutdown is to blame
Trump Mobile "had to pause everything on the FCC side of things" during the shutdown, which is why the golden $499 T1 smartphone won't launch this year.
Trump Mobile, the wireless venture backed by the Trump Organization, has postponed delivery of its long-promised gold-colored T1 smartphone beyond the end of the year, blaming the latest U.S. government shutdown for the delay. The move extends a months-long slide in its launch timeline and underscores the operational challenges of turning a political brand into a mass-market hardware business.
Customer service representatives for Trump Mobile told Fortune the shutdown had disrupted shipments of the $499 device, and said while the device would not be shipped this month, “we’ve been told mid to late January.” The company has not publicly provided a revised delivery date.
”The T1 has been delayed due to the government shutdown. They had to pause everything on the FCC side of things,” the customer service rep said, adding the $499 price has not changed.
Trump Mobile was unveiled in June as a licensing venture that uses the Trump name to sell mobile service and a branded Android handset, the T1 Phone. The device is marketed as a gold-colored smartphone priced at $499, available via preorder with a $100 down payment. It is designed to run on “The 47 Plan,” a $47.45-per-month offering that bundles 5G service with unlimited talk, text, and data, the pricing a nod to Donald Trump’s status as the 45th and 47th U.S. president.

Trump Mobile tells Fortune the T1 smartphone is now expected to arrive in January.
Trump Mobile
At launch, the Trump Organization and Trump Mobile framed the project as both a business opportunity and a statement about domestic manufacturing. Early marketing materials promised a handset “built in the United States,” aligning with Trump’s public criticism of Apple and his threats of 25% tariffs on Apple and Samsung devices made in China. Supply chain experts quickly questioned whether a fully U.S.-made smartphone at that price point was realistic, noting less than 5% of the components in an iPhone are currently manufactured in the U.S., according to IDC estimates.