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Dec 23, 2025

Homeland Security triples cash incentive for voluntary departures to $3,000

Homeland Security triples cash incentive for voluntary departures to $3,000
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has dramatically raised the one-time stipend it pays to undocumented migrants who choose to leave the United States on their own, increasing the amount from US$1,000 to US$3,000. Announced on December 22, 2025, by Secretary Kristi Noem and branded “Home for the Holidays,” the policy also includes a free, DHS-funded one-way ticket to the migrant’s country of citizenship.

Officials framed the move as a fiscal decision: DHS estimates that an involuntary arrest-to-removal operation now averages US$17,000 per person. By contrast, a US$3,000 stipend plus airfare is a fraction of that cost, freeing enforcement resources for higher-priority cases. At a press briefing, Noem said, “Illegal aliens should take advantage of this gift and self-deport because if they don’t, we will find them, we will arrest them, and they will never return.”

The program relies on the recently re-launched CBP Home mobile app (formerly CBP One). Applicants who register through the app, pass a criminal-history check, and schedule departure before December 31 will receive the payment electronically once they scan their boarding pass. DHS says more than 17,000 migrants used the US$1,000 offer between May and November; it hopes the larger sum will accelerate departures before end-of-year metrics are reported to Congress.

Homeland Security triples cash incentive for voluntary departures to $3,000


For migrants—or employers assisting departing staff—who need help with passports, entry visas, or other travel documentation, VisaHQ offers fast, online processing and real-time status tracking through its U.S. portal (https://www.visahq.com/united-states/). The service can minimize last-minute paperwork issues and ensure smoother outbound travel for those opting into the “Home for the Holidays” program.

For U.S. employers that use E-Verify, the policy could ease Form I-9 risk: once a foreign national is recorded as having departed, any future unauthorized employment will trigger real-time notices. Multinational companies with large frontline workforces—retail, agriculture, construction—should brief HR teams on how to respond to sudden workforce gaps and ensure continued compliance with anti-discrimination rules.

Immigration advocates argue that the policy pressures immigrants into hasty decisions without legal counsel, while restrictionist groups say it does not replace large-scale removals promised on the campaign trail. Legal challenges are expected, but because the stipend is discretionary—and migrants must voluntarily opt-in—analysts believe the program will likely survive in court. Businesses, especially those in seasonal industries, should monitor whether a rapid uptick in voluntary departures exacerbates already tight labor markets in early 2026.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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