Over 145,000 US Children Separated from Parents Since Trump’s ICE Surge, Study Estimates
145,000+ US Kids Separated from Parents in Trump ICE Surge

More than 145,000 children in the United States have likely experienced the detention of a parent by immigration authorities since the start of Donald Trump’s second presidency, according to a new report published by a prominent US think tank.

The report, released on Monday by the Brookings Institution, estimates that approximately 146,635 children who are US citizens have had a parent detained during the mass deportation campaign initiated by the Trump administration after he resumed office in early January. The study further found that among these children, more than 22,000 experienced the detention of all co-resident parents.

Roughly 36 percent of the affected children were younger than six years old, highlighting a stringent immigration enforcement approach that has drawn widespread criticism from civil rights and immigrant advocacy groups.

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The Brookings Institution’s report also revealed that the largest share of US citizen children with a detained parent are linked to Mexico, accounting for nearly 54 percent, while children with parents from Guatemala and Honduras together constitute more than 25 percent.

Washington DC and Texas have recorded the highest share of American children with an affected parent, with more than five per 1,000 facing parental immigration detention, according to the report.

Brookings researchers noted that the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) reported 18,277 detainees with US citizen children in fiscal year 2025, but described this figure as “almost certainly a substantial undercount.”

Earlier in May, a Guardian investigation found that the arrest of approximately 18,400 parents had affected as many as 32,000 children in the first seven months of 2025 alone. That figure included at least 12,000 US citizen children.

The investigation also found that the Trump administration had arrested about 2,300 parents and deported about 1,400 parents each month in 2025, nearly double the monthly deportation rate recorded in 2024 at the end of Joe Biden’s presidency.

Brookings researchers pointed to anecdotal evidence suggesting that many immigrants are either not asked whether they have children or choose not to disclose that information out of fear. Instead, the researchers relied on demographic data from the Detention Data Project, matching detainees’ characteristics—including country or region of origin and marital status—with similar undocumented individuals identified in the American Community Survey (ACS), a nationally representative household survey.

Roughly 13 million adults in the United States are undocumented or hold only limited legal protections. Consequently, more than 4.6 million US citizen children live with at least one parent vulnerable to deportation, and about 2.5 million could face the detention of all parents in their household.

“For both logistical and political reasons, the administration will not achieve its stated goal of removing every unauthorized immigrant from the United States,” researchers said. “At a minimum, DHS should collect and publicly report accurate data on the number of parents facing detention or deportation, as well as the number of US citizen children who leave the country following a parent’s removal.”

The researchers added: “As immigration enforcement expands, ensuring that affected children have access to basic supports and protections should be understood not as optional, but as a necessary governmental responsibility tied to the foreseeable consequences of family separation and displacement.”

In a statement to the Guardian, a DHS spokesperson argued that “being in detention is a choice.”

“ICE does not separate families,” the spokesperson said. “Parents are asked if they want to be removed with their children or ICE will place the children with a safe person the parent designates. This is consistent with past administrations’ immigration enforcement.”

The spokesperson added, among other things, that “parents can take control of their departure” from the US with the CBP Home app “and reserve the chance to come back the right legal way.”

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In March, a report by the Women’s Refugee Commission (WRC) and Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) found that the Trump administration deported many immigrant parents without asking whether they had children or allowing them to decide if their children would accompany them.