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President Trump’s financial disclosure report for last year reveals he brought in more than $2 billion via various channels.
The report, released Tuesday by the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, shows Trump received hundreds of millions of dollars from crypto venture World Liberty Financial, which he and his sons helped launch in 2024.
The president also raked in more than $600 million in royalties from meme coin sales and millions more from holdings in dozens of corporations, according to the 927-page report — which is nearly 700 pages longer than his 2024 disclosure.
Here is what to know about Trump’s financial disclosure.
Trump’s voyage into crypto pays dividends
Weeks before he defeated then-Vice President Kamala Harris to secure a second term, Trump and his two oldest sons, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, launched World Liberty Financial along with the Witkoff family. Steve Witkoff is the president’s foreign envoy.
On his disclosure, Trump reported more than $526.8 million in proceeds from tokens sold by the firm. The president also sold more than $65.6 million in World Liberty Financial equity last year.
Trump is listed as a co-founder emeritus of World Liberty Financial. His youngest son, Barron Trump, is listed as a decentralized finance “visionary” for the venture.
Days before Trump’s second inauguration, a firm linked to the government of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) paid $500 million for a 49 percent stake in World Liberty Financial, in a deal signed by Eric Trump.
Months later, the Trump administration and the UAE announced plans to partner on a massive data center in Abu Dhabi. The administration also approved a deal to send hundreds of valuable chips to the aforementioned firm, led by Emirati royal Sheikh Tahnoun bin Zayed Al Nahyan.
In May 2025, another company run by Sheikh Tahnoun used a stablecoin from World Liberty Financial to complete a $2 billion investment in Binance, a crypto exchange. Later that fall, Trump pardoned Changpeng Zhao, the founder and former CEO of Binance who pleaded guilty in 2023 on money-laundering charges.
Trump also said on his disclosure he received more than $635 million in royalties via a licensing agreement between CIC Digital LLC, an affiliate of the Trump Organization, and “celebration coins.”
These transactions appear to be connected to the president’s meme coins, which he launched shortly before his inauguration in January 2025.
Trump is listed on the disclosure as the manager, president, secretary and treasurer of CIC Digital and CIC Ventures LLC. His meme coin’s website notes that CIC Digital and Celebration Cards LLC “will receive trading revenue” from activities of Trump meme cards.
In May of last year, the president hosted more than 200 investors in his $TRUMP meme coin at his golf club outside of Washington, D.C.
From his involvement with World Liberty Financial and the meme coins alone, Trump reported more than $1.2 billion in income last year.
The president’s administration has openly embraced the crypto industry and is pushing Congress to pass the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act. While the House passed the crypto market structure legislation last summer, the Senate is locked in negotiations over remaining disputes, including an ethics provision.
Democratic lawmakers on Wednesday pounced on the disclosure’s revelations about Trump’s crypto ties, arguing they indicate “corruption.”
On social media, Rep. Angie Craig (D-Minn.) wrote that instead of using the presidency to “put money in your pockets, he’s lining his own,” referring to Trump.
Trump’s properties continued to yield hundreds of millions
Trump made his initial fortune in real estate, and his disclosure shows he is still earning millions in income from that avenue.
From his Mar-a-Lago club, which he is still the president of, Trump earned more than $77.4 million in revenue last year. In 2024, before returning to office, he received in excess of $50.1 million from the resort in Palm Beach, Fla.
In 2025, Trump’s golf resort in Doral, Fla., also brought in more than $121.8 million in revenue. This year, the president hosted House GOP lawmakers at the Miami-area property for a retreat in March, while the PGA Tour held the Cadillac Championship there in May.
His golf club just outside the nation’s capital reported more than $24.8 million in revenue, while his courses in New York, New Jersey and Palm Beach brought in roughly $65.6 million combined.
Trump’s golf course reach is not limited to the U.S., either. His two courses in Scotland — one of which he has long tried to host an Open Championship at — reported more than $40.3 million in revenue.
The aforementioned eight properties reported nearly $330 million combined in 2025.
Trump held stocks in world’s largest companies
Even as his administration is tasked with regulating their activity, the president reported holdings in a lengthy list of companies, including Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, AT&T, Chevron, ExxonMobil, Goldman Sachs, Meta and Nvidia as well as Tesla, whose CEO is Elon Musk, the former head of the Department of Government Efficiency.
Trump also reported purchases of between $5 million and $25 million in the likes of Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, Nvidia and Tesla.
In December, Trump allowed Nvidia to sell its powerful H200 chips to Chinese buyers. Democratic lawmakers scolded the move, pointing to national security concerns.
The president on Wednesday said he is not “involved” in his financial transactions.
“We have funds that run my money,” Trump told reporters at Joint Base Andrews. The president noted he “made a lot of money” before he entered politics.
“I have many people, I don’t know what they call it, closed accounts or something. You put your money in, and that’s it, I don’t talk to them. They’re big institutions and they run it,” Trump added, referring to who handles his money.
Trump receives bevy of free tickets to sporting events
Of the 11 gifts Trump reported, 10 included tickets to sporting events.
Less than a month into his term, Trump attended Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans after receiving 10 tickets from New Orleans Saints owner Gayle Benson. Those tickets were worth $50,000, with the president watching the Philadelphia Eagles defeat the Kansas City Chiefs alongside members of his family and multiple Republican lawmakers.
Benson was not the only NFL owner to give Trump tickets last year. Washington Commanders owner Josh Harris gave the president 15 tickets, worth $2,250 in total, to his team’s home game against the Detroit Lions in November.
Trump also received 10 tickets worth $15,000 from FIFA president Gianni Infantino to the association’s Club World Cup — which took place in the U.S. last year. The president also plans on attending the final game of the ongoing FIFA World Cup, set for July 19 in New Jersey.
UFC CEO Dana White, whose organization held a slate of fights on the White House lawn earlier this month, also gave Trump $6,750 worth of tickets to two events.
Trump also received tickets to the Daytona 500 from the NASCAR-owning France family, the Ryder Cup from the PGA of America and a New York Yankees-Detroit Tigers game on Sept. 11 from Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenner.
In total, the president got 125 tickets to sporting events worth $122,050, free of charge.
The only non-ticket gift was a statue of Trump commemorating his reaction to the assassination attempt against him in July 2024. Anthony Constantino, the CEO of Sticker Mule and the Republican nominee for the open House seat in New York’s 21st Congressional District, unveiled the $250,000 statue in February 2025.
Julia Shapero contributed reporting.
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