Trump administration says it will pay immigrants in the US illegally
$1,000 to leave the country
[May 06, 2025]
By REBECCA SANTANA
WASHINGTON (AP) — Pushing forward with its mass deportation agenda,
President Donald Trump's administration said Monday that it would pay
$1,000 to immigrants who are in the United States illegally and return
to their home country voluntarily.
The Department of Homeland Security said in a news release that it would
also pay for travel assistance — and that people who use an app called
CBP Home to tell the government they plan to return home will be
“deprioritized” for detention and removal by immigration enforcement.
“If you are here illegally, self-deportation is the best, safest and
most cost-effective way to leave the United States to avoid arrest,"
Secretary Kristi Noem said. “DHS is now offering illegal aliens
financial travel assistance and a stipend to return to their home
country through the CBP Home App.”
The department said it had already paid for a plane ticket for one
migrant to return home to Honduras from Chicago and said more tickets
have been booked for this week and next.
It's a major part of Trump's administration
Trump made immigration enforcement and the mass deportation of
immigrants in the United States illegally a centerpiece of his campaign,
and he is following through during the first months of his
administration. But it is a costly, resource-intensive endeavor.
While the Republican administration is asking Congress for a massive
increase in resources for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement
department responsible for removing people from the country, it’s also
pushing people in the country illegally to “self-deport.”

It has coupled this self-deportation push with television ads
threatening action against people in the U.S. illegally and social media
images showing immigration enforcement arrests and migrants being sent
to a prison in El Salvador.
The Trump administration has often portrayed self-deportation as a way
for migrants to preserve their ability to return to the United States
someday, and the president himself suggested it on Monday while speaking
to reporters at the White House. He said immigrants who “self-deport”
and leave the U.S. might have a chance to return legally eventually “if
they’re good people” and “love our country.”
“And if they aren’t, they won’t,” Trump said.
But Aaron Reichlen-Melnick, a senior fellow at the American Immigration
Council, which advocates for immigrants, said there’s a lot for migrants
to be cautious about in the latest offer from Homeland Security.
He said it’s often worse for people to leave the country and not fight
their case in immigration court, especially if they’re already in
removal proceedings. He said if migrants are in removal proceedings and
don’t show up in court they can automatically get a deportation order
and leaving the country usually counts as abandoning many applications
for relief including asylum applications.
It can be an intricate process
And Homeland Security is not indicating that it is closely coordinating
with the immigration courts so that there are no repercussions for
people in immigration court if they leave, he said.
“People’s immigration status is not as simple as this makes it out to
be," Reichlen-Melnick said.
He questioned where Homeland Security would get the money and the
authorization to make the payments — and he suggested they are necessary
because the administration can't arrest and remove as many people as it
has promised so it has to encourage people to do it on their own.

[to top of second column]
|

Migrants walk into Mexico after being deported from the U.S., at El
Chaparral pedestrian border bridge in Tijuana, Mexico, Jan. 21,
2025. (AP Photo/Felix Marquez, File)

“They’re not getting their numbers," he said.
As part of its self-deportation effort, the Trump administration has
transformed an app that had been used by the Biden administration to
allow nearly 1 million migrants to schedule appointments to enter
the country into a tool to help migrants return home. Under the
Biden administration, it was called CBP One; now it's dubbed CBP
Home.
Homeland Security said “thousands” of migrants have used the app to
self-deport.
But Mark Krikorian, who heads the Center for Immigration Studies,
which advocates for less immigration, said he doesn’t see the offer
of paying people to go home as an admission that something in the
Trump administration’s immigration enforcement agenda isn’t working.
Considering the millions of people who are in the country illegally,
he said, it’s impossible to deport all of them so the administration
has to combine its own enforcement efforts with encouraging people
to go home voluntarily.
Krikorian said he supports the idea of paying migrants to leave
although he questioned how it would work in reality.
“How do you make sure that they’ve actually gone home? Do you make
them sign an agreement where they agree not to challenge their
removal if they were to come back?” he questioned. “The execution
matters, but the concept is sound.”
This has been tried before
Other countries have tried various iterations of paying migrants to
return home.
There's a reason it's attractive to governments wanting to encourage
migrants to go. It costs less to buy someone a plane ticket and some
incentive money than it does to pay to find them, detain them if
necessary, wait for the courts to rule on their case and then send
them home.
The Department of Homeland Security said that it costs $17,121 to
arrest, detain and remove someone in the U.S. illegally.

Voluntary returns also don't require extensive
government-to-government negotiations to get a country to take back
its citizens, which can be a major benefit. There are a number of
countries that either don't take back their own citizens who are
being returned by U.S. immigration enforcement officials or make
that process challenging.
A 2011 study by the Migration Policy Institute and the European
University Institute found that there were about 128 programs —
often referred to as pay-to-go programs — around the world.
But the study found that, with a few exceptions such as one program
to return people in the 1990s from Germany to Bosnia, these
voluntary return programs generally failed at encouraging large
numbers of people to go home.
It is not clear whether these programs resulted in migrants who took
the payments actually staying in their home countries and not trying
to emigrate again.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |