WASHINGTON — The ''Warrior Dividend'' that President Donald Trump announced during his televised address to the nation Wednesday is not a Christmas bonus made possible by tariff revenues, as the president suggested.
Instead, the $1,776 payments to troops are coming from a congressionally-approved housing supplement — money they were already set to receive — that was a part of tax cut extensions and expansions bill signed into law in July. Trump's administration identified the source of the ''dividend'' payments Thursday.
In his remarks, Trump alluded to his ''One Big Beautiful Bill Act'' playing a role, but suggested that tariffs were largely responsible for the payments already on the way to 1.45 million members of the military.
''We made a lot more money than anybody thought because of tariffs and the bill helped us along. Nobody deserves it more than our military," he said in announcing what he described as a ''dividend.''
Trump has teased the idea of using his sweeping tariffs on imports to give Americans dividends ever since he imposed them in April. But these new payments are being disbursed by the Pentagon from a $2.9 billion military housing supplement that was part of Trump's ''One Big Beautiful Bill Act" to augment existing housing allowances, according to a senior administration official who requested anonymity to describe the payments.
The amount of the payments is a nod to next year's 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776. In total, the measure is expected to cost $2.6 billion.
Trump's announcement comes as he's faced pressure to show he's working to address rising costs for Americans, with prices remaining stubbornly high as the president has imposed double-digit tariffs on imports from almost every country. Trump has promised to lower prices, but he has struggled to do so. Inflation hit a four-decade high in June 2022 during Joe Biden's presidency and then began to fall. But inflation has stayed elevated under Trump in part because of his tariffs.
Separately, members of the U.S. Coast Guard will be getting a similar one-time payment, the Department of Homeland Security announced Thursday. The "Devotion to Duty" payments, authorized by Secretary Kristi Noem a day earlier, will be $2,000 because, unlike the ''Warrior Dividend,'' they are subject to taxes. The amount Coast Guard members take home will be closer to $1,776.