Trump's 'Gold Card' Visa Plan to Favor Rich Investors with $5 Million

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US President Trump To Introduce A $5million Visa Plan

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President Donald Trump's New 'Gold Card' Visa Plan to Favor Rich Investors with $5 Million

US President Trump wearing the MAGA Hat
Donald Trump 

In a bold move from deporting illegal immigrants, President Donald Trump is set to unveil a new visa initiative designed exclusively for the ultra-wealthy. The Trump Visa Plan is a program that offers a fast-track route to U.S. permanent residency for individuals willing to invest a staggering $5 million. While Trump presents it as a strategy to attract high-caliber individuals who will contribute to the economy, the plan raises pressing questions about fairness, national security, and the future of merit-based immigration.

When Will the Trump Visa Plan Begin?

For decades, obtaining a U.S. green card has been an arduous process, requiring years of residency, employment sponsorship, or family ties. The Trump Visa Plan, however, redefines the rules—offering a direct path to citizenship for those who can afford the price tag.

The Trump Visa Plan program is expected to launch in two weeks from today, opening doors to high-net-worth individuals worldwide.

Trump has positioned this initiative as a revenue-generating strategy, arguing that the influx of wealthy investors will not only boost the economy but also help pay down the national deficit. 

The new Trump visa plan aims to attract successful individuals who are expected to contribute to the economy by spending money, creating businesses, and paying taxes, as initially envisioned.

Trump Visa Plan May Replace The EB-5 Visa

Image depicting EB-5 Visa
 

Trump Visa Plan in review may likely cause the end of the EB-5 investor visa program, which previously allowed foreigners to gain residency by investing $1.05 million in a U.S. business or $800,000 in economically distressed areas. While the EB-5 aimed to create jobs and stimulate local economies, it faced growing criticism for fraud, backlogs, and misuse by intermediaries.

Trump’s Commerce Secretary, Howard Lutnick, insists that the new program will be fraud-proof, ensuring only "world-class global citizens" can access it. Unlike the EB-5, which required investments to create jobs, the Gold Card relies solely on wealth as the determining factor for entry.

How Would the Trump Visa Plan Affect Immigrants?

Image Depicts American Visa Approval

At face value, the Trump Visa Plan appears to be a lucrative deal for the U.S. If approximately one million visas are sold, that’s $5 trillion in revenue—a sum that could significantly chip away at the USA national debt. Trump sees this program as a financial game-changer, framing it as a win-win for both the government and wealthy immigrants.

However, critics argue that it turns U.S. residency into a commodity, prioritizing wealth over skill, contribution, or national interest. The broader implications of such a policy—both economic and social—remain highly uncertain.

Trump’s response to such concerns has been ambiguous. When pressed on whether Russian oligarchs or other powerful foreign figures could qualify, he brushed it off, stating, “We’re bringing in great people. That’s what matters.”

The Trump visa plan is perhaps Trump’s most radical immigration policy yet—shifting from merit-based selection to a wealth-driven model. Supporters hail it as a smart economic move, while critics decry it as a pay-to-play scheme that undermines the traditional values of U.S. immigration.