Eight months after congressional Republicans approved roughly $191 billion in spending for President Trump’s deportation agenda, the Department of Homeland Security has an estimated $150 billion left to spend, according to a new analysis provided first to MS NOW by FWD.us, a group that studies immigration policy and advocates for reforms.
DHS has not disclosed how it intends to spend all the funds. The analysis was compiled based on comparisons to past ICE and Customs and Border Protection budgets, DHS dispersals beginning last fall and information shared by Hill and DHS sources.
The sum would be enough to fund the entire Department of Homeland Security — excluding the Coast Guard — until the fourth quarter of 2027, according to the advocacy group’s analysis. The reconciliation bill also appropriated roughly $75 billion for ICE; if ICE were to operate under its pre-Trump spending rate of roughly $10 billion per year, it would have enough funds via DHS to sustain it until 2033. (In 2024, the last full year of Joe Biden’s presidency, ICE’s total budget was roughly $9.6 billion.)
The party-line spending bill included $22 billion for unspecified immigration enforcement with “no line items” and “no oversight requirements,” according to FWD.us’s analysis.
One of the largest appropriations is for detention capacity — new facilities to hold tens of thousands of immigrants the administration is seeking to detain and eventually deport. Some $45 billion is allocated for detention facilities, many of which DHS has yet to fully open or find locations for, accounting for 60 percent of the money funneled to ICE in the president’s spending bill last year.
In December, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem came under scrutiny from White House officials, including Stephen Miller, the architect of Trump’s deportation agenda. Miller was frustrated by the pace of DHS’s spending on detention centers, viewing it as too slow, according to a White House official and a federal official familiar with the matter.









