Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

The “Made in America” Trump Phone Appears to be a Disguised Cheapo Chinese Smartphone

read original more articles
Why This Matters

The Trump Mobile T1 highlights the ongoing issue of false 'Made in America' claims in the tech industry, exposing how branding can mislead consumers about product origins. This case underscores the importance of transparency and scrutiny in product manufacturing claims, especially in a politically charged environment.

Key Takeaways

Sign up to see the future, today Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech Email address Sign Up Thank you!

Nine months after it was supposed to ship to consumers, the smartphone nobody asked for is finally here.

Introducing Trump Mobile’s T1, a long-awaited smartphone designed to skim a little cash from America’s most credulous rubes. Announced on June 16, 2025 — the 10-year anniversary of the surreal launch of Donald Trump’s first presidential campaign — the T1 was originally supposed to go out to buyers in either August or September of 2025, depending on which Trump family announcement you read.

Now, nearly a year behind schedule, the T1 is finally here. Select media personalities were the first to get their hands on the product, a 5G smartphone aggressively branded with “Trump Mobile” logos as well as Trump’s signature yellow-gold colorway.

As NBC noted in their review of the phone, the phone comes pre-loaded with Trump’s pet social media company, Truth Social, and features an American flag with only 11 stripes on the back, which is two less than the genuine article. And though early Trump Mobile marketing material pushed the “Made in America” angle hard, a closer look reveals that the T1 appears to actually be a generic smartphone manufactured abroad.

Starting in June 2025, critics noted the announced T1 closely resembled the Revvl 7 Pro 5G, a phone made by the partially state-owned Chinese company Wingtech. As Todd Weaver, CEO of American smartphone manufacturer Purism told CNN at the time: “unless the Trump family secretly built out a secure, onshore or nearshore (fabrication) operation over years of work without anyone noticing, it’s simply not possible to deliver what they’re promising.”

That skepticism proved prescient. In the months since the T1 was first announced, Trump Mobile changed its marketing material to show a different phone entirely. While that seemed to silence critics of the original model, an eagle-eyed Verge reader noted the new unit looks bears a striking similarity to another foreign-built phone, the two-year old HTC U24 Pro.

On top of visual similarities, that phone shares some key technical details with the T1: both feature a 6.8-inch OLED screen, three 50 megapixel cameras, and 12GB of RAM.

Given that HTC is headquartered in Taiwan, it’s likely the T1 is assembled in the same Taiwanese plant as the U24. Still, it remains to be seen where the individual components are sourced from; it could easily be the case that the T1’s bones come from China, which dominates the world in OLED displays and battery cell production.

But until one of the nearly 600,000 customers who preordered the T1 gets a chance to crack one of the smartphones open and document the components found inside, it will remain a mystery as to just how American — or Chinese — Trump Mobile’s flagship device really is. We’ll be watching.

... continue reading