Trump signs nearly $70B immigration bill, locking ICE, CBP funding through fiscal 2029
Trump signed a nearly $70 billion immigration enforcement bill on June 10, funding ICE, CBP and DHS operations across the country through fiscal 2029.
President Donald Trump signed a nearly $70 billion immigration enforcement package into law on June 10, 2026, turning a major border and detention funding bill into federal law for the next several budget cycles. The House passed the measure on June 9 by a 214-212 vote.
According to the White House, the law provides $38 billion for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, $26 billion for Customs and Border Protection, and $5 billion for unforeseen costs. The funding runs through fiscal 2029, giving DHS and its enforcement agencies a longer planning window than a one-year spending patch.
What changed
This is a spending law, not a rewrite of immigration statutes. It does not by itself change who can enter, stay, work, or be removed from the United States. What it does do is make a large pool of enforcement money available for several years, which can affect staffing, detention, transportation and removal operations.
Why it matters nationwide
A multi-year funding commitment can shape how aggressively federal agencies can carry out immigration enforcement across the country. That can matter for border operations, workplace compliance, local law enforcement coordination and the people, employers and families who may feel downstream effects from federal action.
What to watch next is implementation: how DHS allocates the money, how quickly agencies spend it, and whether Congress or the courts get drawn into new fights over oversight and enforcement priorities. The law sets the funding; the operational details will come later.