New hires at ICE are blasting the agency for not delivering the huge bonuses they were promised when they signed up to expand Donald Trump’s immigration enforcement ranks.
In multiple Reddit posts reviewed by the International Business Times UK, federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents complained that they “hadn’t yet seen their signing bonuses materialize.” Others said that when their bonus finally arrived, it was only a “few thousand dollars after taxes.” One agent said they “were unable to cover medical costs for their sick child due to an insurance coverage gap.”
The Trump administration pledged up to $50,000 in incentives for recruits willing to beef up so-called homeland defenders, a campaign that helped swell ICE’s ranks. The Department of Homeland Security touted an incoming class of 12,000 new agents after receiving more than 220,000 applications, though the rapid growth has reportedly strained internal systems. One unnamed administration official previously described the hiring surge as a “s**t show” inside ICE.
Recruitment challenges are piling on at a moment when morale is already battered by controversy over aggressive federal enforcement operations. In Minneapolis, federal immigration agents have been at the center of national headlines after the fatal shooting of 37-year-old ICU nurse Alex Pretti during a protest. The incident, part of a broader operation that also saw the killing of Renée Good and other standoffs between agents and civilians, has sparked widespread criticism, protests, and a federal civil rights investigation.
Beyond concerns about bonuses and public backlash over use of force, agents have also voiced frustration with long hours and high arrest quotas, underscoring deep dissatisfaction within the ranks at a time when the federal immigration apparatus faces intense scrutiny and operational pressure.

