Budget watchdog estimates Golden Dome will cost $1.2T, dwarfing $185B estimate

President Donald Trump discusses the Golden Dome missile defense shield with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in the Oval Office in Washington, May 20. A budget watchdog said on Tuesday the shield could cost $1.2 trillion to develop.

President Donald Trump discusses the Golden Dome missile defense shield with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in the Oval Office in Washington, May 20. A budget watchdog said on Tuesday the shield could cost $1.2 trillion to develop. (Kevin Lamarque, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • The Congressional Budget Office on Tuesday estimated that President Donald Trump's Golden Dome will cost $1.2 trillion.
  • This figure dwarfs the Pentagon's $185 billion estimate for the missile-defense project.
  • The Golden Dome aims to protect the U.S., but the office said it may struggle against large-scale attacks.

WASHINGTON — The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated on Tuesday that President Donald Trump's ​Golden Dome missile defense shield could cost about $1.2 trillion to develop, deploy and operate over 20 years, a figure that dwarfs a $185 billion price tag offered ‌by the program's Pentagon director.

Golden Dome envisions expanding ground‑based defenses such as interceptor missiles, sensors and command‑and‑control systems while ⁠adding space‑based elements meant to detect, ​track and potentially shoot down incoming threats ⁠from orbit. These would include advanced satellite networks and orbiting weapons.

The office estimated acquisition ‌costs alone for the system ‌would total just over $1 trillion, with the space-based interceptor layer — a constellation ⁠of 7,800 satellites — accounting for about 70 percent ⁠of acquisition costs.

The system would cover the entire United States, including Alaska and Hawaii, and would have the capacity to fully engage an attack from a regional adversary such as North Korea.

However, the budget office warned the system could be overwhelmed by a full-scale attack from Russia or China.

"The President's so-called 'Golden Dome' is nothing more than ‌a massive giveaway to defense contractors paid for entirely by ​working Americans," said Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., ranking member of the Senate Budget Committee.

The Pentagon's Golden Dome office did not respond to a request for comment.

The U.S. Space Force has awarded contracts worth up to $3.2 billion to 12 companies to develop space-based missile defense interceptor systems. Unlike existing ground-based systems, the Space-Based Interceptor program deploys weapons in orbit, enabling the military to engage and destroy threats earlier in ​their flight path.

Ultimately, companies could win lucrative interceptor production contracts worth $1.8 billion to $3.4 billion annually, the ‌Pentagon said in ‌a presentation. But ⁠up-front interceptor development costs are high, with industry players expected to self-fund what executives have estimated to be at least a $200 million to $2 billion effort.

Major defense contractors, including Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, RTX and Boeing, are expected to compete for various components of Golden ‌Dome.

An executive order to establish ​the Golden Dome was signed on Jan. 27, 2025, ‌and set an aggressive ⁠timetable to field ​a comprehensive homeland missile defense system by 2028.

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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