Trump Mobile, a smartphone company founded by Donald Trump Jr, and Eric Trump, released an updated mock-up of the design of the T1 Phone, the company’s main Trump-branded smartphone offering. While the phone is still gilded, it has some noteworthy changes, including a vertical array of cameras rather than the previous triangular design.
The new design also features a 6.78-inch OLED display and a triple camera system comprising a 50-megapixel main sensor, a 2x telephoto lens, and an 8-megapixel ultrawide camera. On the front, there is a 50-megapixel selfie camera. Additionally, the device packs a 5,000 mAh battery with 30W charging support. It is set to run on Android 15 and will be powered by a Qualcomm processor, although the exact chipset has not been specified.
READ: Trump Mobile: Trump family launches “made in America” T1 smartphone (June 17, 2025)
The website does not mention the device’s final price. However, it notes that it will undergo final assembly in Miami. Beyond the redesigned device, the company has also tweaked its cellular plans. It is now offering a 15% discount for military members and veterans on the $47.45 plan. The site further states that “Trump” will be proudly displayed in the status bar as the network name.
The phone’s initial “made in the USA” claims have been watered down even further, according to Business Insider. There is no longer any information on the website about when the device will be released. The website simply prompts potential customers to “Join the Waitlist.”
The phone was first announced in June 2025, on the 10-year anniversary of President Donald Trump’s first campaign launch. It was originally expected to launch in August. However, there have been multiple delays, and a company representative previously told Business Insider that the phones would be shipped at the end of January, attributing the delay in part to the 43-day government shutdown in the fall.
READ: Trump threatens Apple with 25% tariffs over iPhone production in India (May 27, 2025)
The phone was initially touted as “Made in USA.” Eric Trump had said on “The Benny Show” podcast that “eventually” all the phones can be built within the United States of America.
Within days of the launch event in June, the company’s “MADE IN THE USA” branding was scrubbed from the website, with the phone described as being “brought to life right here in the USA” with “American hands.” The phone is now described as “designed with American values in mind” and “shaped by American innovation,” with “American teams helping guide design and quality.”

