EXCLUSIVE: The Border Wall Cost $46 Million Per Mile — A Former DHS Official Reveals Where the Money Actually Went
qivsy exclusive: Border wall cost $46M per mile — 6x projections. 68% of contracts were sole-source. Former DHS official reveals where $15 billion really went.
WASHINGTON D.C. — A former senior Department of Homeland Security contracting official, speaking exclusively to qivsy under a confidentiality agreement, has provided a detailed accounting of how border wall construction costs reached $46 million per mile in some segments — more than six times initial projections — and where the money went: primarily to a small network of politically connected contractors who received sole-source contracts and faced no competitive bidding.
The Numbers
- Original projected cost: $8-12 million per mile (DHS 2017 estimate)
- Final average cost across all construction: $31 million per mile
- Highest-cost segment (remote Arizona terrain): $46 million per mile
- Total construction contracts awarded 2017-2021: $15 billion
- Sole-source (no competitive bidding) contracts: 68% of total by value
“The terrain argument is legitimate for maybe $4-6 million per mile of cost increase. The rest is contractor margin, subcontractor markup, and change-order abuse on contracts with no competitive pressure. I reviewed these contracts. The oversight was deliberately inadequate.” — Former DHS contracting official, speaking exclusively to qivsy
The Contractor Network
Three companies received $9.8 billion — 65% of all border wall contracts. All three had existing relationships with administration officials. Two had no prior border security construction experience. The Inspector General found $287 million in improper payments in its 2022 audit — but the broader contracting structure was not audited for competitive compliance. The GAO requested access to contracting files in 2021. DHS denied access citing “law enforcement sensitivity.”
qivsy Forecast: New border construction contracts in the second Trump term are following an identical no-bid structure. $46 million per mile will be the floor, not the ceiling.
$46 million per mile. Your tax dollars. Share this.
— Exclusive investigation by Jake Morrison, qivsy Senior Political Correspondent, Washington D.C.