Trump Made Over $1 Billion From Crypto in 2025 — Here's What His New Financial Disclosure Reveals
Trump Made Over $1 Billion From Crypto in 2025 — Here's What His New Financial Disclosure Reveals
President Donald Trump's cryptocurrency ventures didn't just make headlines in 2025 — they made him a fortune. According to a sweeping new financial disclosure filed with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, the president reported more than $1 billion in income tied directly to his crypto businesses last year, cementing digital assets as the single largest source of his personal wealth during his second term.
The numbers, buried inside a 927-page filing released Tuesday, are staggering by any presidential standard — and they're already reigniting a national conversation about money, power, and the blurry line between the Oval Office and the Trump family's business empire.
Here's a full breakdown of what the disclosure shows, why it matters, and what critics and the White House are saying about it.
The Headline Numbers: Over $1 Billion From Crypto Alone
Trump's 2025 annual financial disclosure — the first covering a full year of his second, non-consecutive term — shows two major crypto income streams that together pushed his digital-asset earnings past the billion-dollar mark, with some outlets putting the combined crypto total closer to $1.4 billion once additional token sales and equity gains are factored in.
1. $635 million in meme coin royalties The single largest chunk came from royalties tied to $TRUMP, the meme coin the president launched on the Solana blockchain just three days before his January 2025 inauguration. The disclosure describes this income as tied to "Celebration Coins," reportedly connected to CIC Digital LLC, part of Trump's meme coin business empire.
2. Over $500 million from World Liberty Financial Trump also reported more than $500 million in income from World Liberty Financial (WLFI), the cryptocurrency and DeFi venture he co-founded in 2024 alongside his sons, Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., along with the sons of Steve Witkoff, his special envoy to the Middle East. A significant piece of that figure traces back to a 2025 token sale to the company then known as Alt5 Sigma — a deal that reportedly entitled the Trump family to roughly $500 million, even though Alt5's own stock has since fallen more than 90%.
Beyond those two headline figures, the filing also lists more than $236 million from additional crypto token sales and over $65 million from an equity sale tied to World Liberty Financial, pushing the president's total documented crypto haul for the year well past $1 billion.
Why This Disclosure Is Unlike Any Other President's
To put the scale of Trump's filing in perspective: former President Barack Obama's final financial disclosure ran eight pages. Joe Biden's was 11 pages. Vice President JD Vance's most recent filing was 17 pages.
Trump's 2025 disclosure runs 927 pages.
That sheer volume reflects just how sprawling his business interests have become since returning to office — spanning real estate, media settlements, investment accounts, and now, crypto ventures that didn't even exist during his first term.
It's Not Just Crypto: Other Big-Ticket Income Sources
While digital assets dominated the headlines, the disclosure also detailed hundreds of millions of dollars from Trump's traditional business holdings and legal wins:
- $122 million from Trump National Doral in Florida
- $77.5 million from Mar-a-Lago
- $39 million from Trump Tower Chicago
- More than $80 million in income from legal settlements with major media companies, including ABC, CBS/Paramount, Meta, YouTube, and X
The disclosure also shows Trump's investment accounts buying and selling shares of GEO Group, a private prison operator and major ICE contractor, with purchases beginning just ten days after his inauguration and continuing as the number of immigration detainees climbed through the year.
Trump's Net Worth Has Nearly Tripled
The financial windfall has had a dramatic effect on Trump's overall wealth. According to Forbes, his net worth climbed to roughly $6 billion in 2025, up from about $2.3 billion the year before — growth driven overwhelmingly by his crypto holdings.
Outside watchdog groups have offered even higher estimates of how central crypto has become to his fortune. Nonprofit watchdog Accountable.US estimated in an August 2025 report that roughly $11.6 billion, or about 73%, of Trump's total net worth is now tied to his cryptocurrency ventures.
The Ethics Questions Won't Go Away
Trump's crypto windfall has drawn sustained scrutiny from Democratic lawmakers, government ethics experts, and watchdog organizations, largely because of how tightly the ventures are wound around his own administration and family.
Steve Witkoff's dual role. Witkoff, who serves as Trump's special envoy to the Middle East, co-founded World Liberty Financial alongside his sons and members of the Trump family. Democratic senators, including Elissa Slotkin and Adam Schiff, have pressed Witkoff over reports that he retained his WLFI ownership stake months after publicly stating he was in the process of fully divesting. His disclosure remains uncertified by the Office of Government Ethics more than seven months after it was filed, according to the watchdog group Democracy Defenders Fund — something the group calls a red flag that typically signals unresolved conflict-of-interest concerns.
Foreign investment ties. Reporting has also connected World Liberty Financial to major foreign capital, including a reported $500 million investment from an Abu Dhabi-backed investment vehicle just before Trump's inauguration, and a separate $2 billion stablecoin deal involving a UAE-linked firm and the crypto exchange Binance. Critics argue these deals raise national security and conflict-of-interest questions given Witkoff's simultaneous role negotiating Middle East policy on the administration's behalf.
Security concerns over token buyers. In November 2025, Senators Elizabeth Warren and Jack Reed asked the Justice Department and Treasury Department to investigate reports that WLFI tokens had been sold to entities with alleged blockchain ties to North Korean hackers, a sanctioned Russian financial tool, and other flagged actors. World Liberty Financial has denied wrongdoing, saying it conducts rigorous compliance checks on all token purchasers.
Retail investors left holding losses. Independent blockchain analysis has found that while Trump and insiders benefited enormously, the majority of everyday buyers of the $TRUMP meme coin have lost money. Roughly 80% of the coin's total supply reportedly remains held by Trump-aligned entities under a multi-year vesting schedule, shielding insiders from much of the volatility that hit ordinary retail buyers.
The White House Response
The administration has firmly rejected any suggestion of impropriety. White House Deputy Press Secretary Anna Kelly told reporters that neither the president nor his family has ever engaged in conflicts of interest, framing the administration's crypto-friendly policies as part of a broader push to make America "the crypto capital of the world" through executive actions and legislation like the GENIUS Act.
The administration has also pointed out that Trump's business interests are held in a trust and that his sons now run the family's operations, arguing this structure keeps the president legally separated from day-to-day decision-making.
World Liberty Financial's leadership has echoed that defense. Zach Witkoff, the company's CEO and son of Steve Witkoff, told CNBC in October 2025 that conflict-of-interest concerns were "complete nonsense," emphasizing that the younger generation's crypto work is separate from their fathers' government responsibilities.
What Happens Next
With Congress currently weighing new crypto market-structure legislation, Democratic lawmakers say the stakes go beyond this single disclosure. Their concern is that pending bills could shield governance tokens like $WLFI from stronger oversight and loosen recordkeeping requirements right as scrutiny of Trump-linked crypto ventures intensifies.
For now, the 2025 disclosure stands as the clearest official confirmation yet of just how central cryptocurrency has become to the Trump family's finances during his second term — and it's likely to keep fueling debate in Washington for months to come.
This article is based on Trump's 2025 financial disclosure filed with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics and reporting from Fox Business, NBC News, Yahoo News, and other outlets. Figures reported in official financial disclosures are often listed as ranges, so exact totals may vary slightly between sources.
