Key Points

The Trump administration has introduced a new investment-based visa program called the Trump Gold Card. Individuals can obtain a visa for $1 million, while corporations can purchase one for an employee for $2 million. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick stated the program is designed to attract high-earning individuals who will create businesses and jobs in America. President Trump compared the new visa to a "signing bonus" for top talent.

Key Points: Trump Gold Card Visa Sells for 1 Million as H-1B Restricted

  • New $1 million visa replaces diversity lottery program
  • Corporations can buy a $2 million card for an employee
  • All applicants undergo rigorous DHS security vetting
  • Program aims to raise over $100 billion for US treasury
2 min read

As US restricts H-1B, 'Trump Gold Card' visa goes on sale for $1 million

Trump's new $1 million investment visa replaces programs like the diversity lottery, aiming to attract top earners and create American jobs.

"Instead of people trying to take the jobs from Americans, they are going to create businesses and create jobs for Americans. - Howard Lutnick"

Washington, September 21

As the Trump administration restricts the H-1B visas, it has released the details of an investment-based programme called the 'Trump Gold Card'.

President Trump signed an executive order on Friday that would allow people to obtain a visa for $1 million and corporations for $2 million.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick posted the details of the programme on X on Saturday, asserting this pathway "does not expand immigration."

"For $1M, individuals can obtain the Trump Gold Card -- creating jobs and building businesses here in America. For $2M, corporations can purchase a Corporate Trump Gold Card for one employee. The company -- not the individual -- owns the card, with the option to transfer to another employee for a fee," he wrote.

Lutnick added that all applicants under the Gold Card Programme will undergo "rigorous DHS vetting," and will pay a "$15,000 processing fee."

The Commerce Secretary emphasised that it "will replace broken visa categories like the diversity lottery, which brings down America instead of attracting the high-earning individuals these programs were originally designed to attract."

After signing the Executive Order on Friday, Trump said the Gold Card is like a "signing bonus" for baseball or football players.

"One of the biggest problems we have is that people, they go to the best schools, and they do great, and they get great marks, and then they're thrown out of the country. You're not allowed to stay this way. So, like a signing bonus in baseball or football, a corporation will be able to get them to stay in the country," the US President added.

Lutnick claimed that through the programme, the US would only take "extraordinary people at the very top."

"Instead of people trying to take the jobs from Americans, they are going to create businesses and create jobs for Americans. And this programme will raise more than $100 billion for the treasury of the United States of America," he noted.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
$1 million for a visa? That's almost 8 crore rupees! Only the super rich can afford this. Most Indian families can't even dream of such amounts. This creates two classes of immigrants - the wealthy and everyone else.
A
Aman W
Actually, this might be good for India's startup ecosystem. Instead of our best talent going to work for American companies, maybe they'll stay here and build businesses if the US is making it so difficult. Silver lining? 🤔
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Sarah B
As someone who went through the H-1B lottery three times, this feels like a slap in the face. We follow all the rules, wait for years, and now they're selling visas to the highest bidder. The American dream has a price tag now.
V
Vikram M
Calling it a "Gold Card" says everything. This isn't about merit or skills - it's about money. What happened to the land of opportunity? Now it's the land of opportunity only if you're wealthy enough.
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Nikhil C
While I understand the frustration, let's be practical. Many wealthy Indians might actually use this route. It could benefit those who want to start businesses in the US. But yes, it does feel like a two-tier system.
M
Meera T
Comparing it to a sports

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