The Trump Mobile much-publicised gold-coloured smartphone is no longer expected to reach customers by the end of the year.
This results from delays that leave the public in doubt of the company’s promises and its place in an already crowded market.
Trump Mobile’s customer service team has told the Financial Times that the recent U.S. government shutdown disrupted shipments, adding there was a “strong possibility” the handset would not be delivered this month.
That admission is the clearest sign that the device, unveiled in June, is still far from ready.
Trump Mobile was launched after the Trump family business licensed its name for a new mobile service and a $499 smartphone known as the T1.
Presented as a patriotic alternative to mainstream brands, the phone was pitched as a gold-accented, U.S.-assembled device. Months on, key details are still unanswered, including who is building it and where critical components are coming from.
Rather than shipping the promised handset, the company has begun directing customers towards refurbished phones. Its website continues to take $100 pre-booking fees for the T1 and still points to delivery within the year, despite issues around production.
At the heart of the offering is not a new network but a resale arrangement. Trump Mobile operates as a mobile virtual network operator, using T-Mobile’s infrastructure under what it calls the “47 Plan”, priced at $47.45 per month.
The branding leans heavily on political identity, a strategy familiar from other Trump-linked ventures.
The delays also expose a structural problem. The United States has little domestic smartphone manufacturing capacity.
Nearly every handset sold in the country is made overseas, mainly in China, South Korea, and increasingly in India and Vietnam. Promising a home-assembled phone in that context was always going to be difficult.
The market offers little margin for error. Apple and Samsung top U.S. smartphone sales, leaving limited space for newcomers without scale, supply chains, or technical differentiation.
For Trump Mobile, appeal appears to rest more on loyalty and symbolism than on hardware innovation.
The company did not respond to requests for comment on the delays or on the shift towards refurbished devices.
For now, the gold phone remains a concept rather than a product, and the gap between the promise and the delivery is becoming harder to ignore.

