- President Trump’s 2025 financial disclosure shows he earned more than $1 billion from crypto alone: $635 million in royalties through an entity linked to his memecoin (which launched days before his inauguration) and over $500 million in proceeds from token sales by World Liberty Financial, his flagship crypto venture co-founded with his sons.
- Trump also collected at least $86.5 million in legal settlements from companies he tangled with in office — including $24.5 million from Meta, $16 million each from Paramount and Disney — while his Mar-a-Lago resort generated $77 million in income (up from $50 million the prior year) and Trump National Doral pulled in $122 million.
- Ethics watchdogs say the disclosure reveals unprecedented presidential conflicts of interest: Trump has been actively advancing policies to lighten crypto regulation while earning billions from crypto ventures, and his memecoin offered high-ranking holders private dinner access with the president — even as retail investors who bought in have lost most of their money, with the memecoin’s market cap collapsing from $15 billion to below $400 million.
- The disclosure didn’t include ventures linked to Trump’s eldest sons, who now lead the Trump Organization and have separately made investments in drone makers and bitcoin miners; Melania Trump also reported $10.7 million from her Amazon MGM documentary and $6 million from NFT licensing.
What Happened?
President Trump’s annual financial disclosure, filed Tuesday with the Office of Government Ethics, revealed a 2025 crypto windfall exceeding $1 billion — the largest income figure ever reported by a sitting U.S. president from a single asset class. The bulk came from his memecoin ($635 million in royalties) and World Liberty Financial, the family’s stablecoin and token venture ($500 million+ in token sale proceeds). Beyond crypto, Trump reported $86.5 million in legal settlements from major corporations including Meta, Paramount, and Disney; $77 million from Mar-a-Lago; $122 million from Trump National Doral; $4.7 million from Trump-branded watches; and $1.9 million in royalties from his “Save America” book. The filing covered calendar year 2025 — his first full year back in the White House — and a separate report earlier showed a surge in stock trading in Q1, with major positions in Amazon, Meta, Nvidia, and Tesla.
Why It Matters?
The scale and nature of Trump’s crypto income creates what ethics experts describe as textbook conflicts of interest: the president is simultaneously earning billions from crypto ventures and setting federal crypto policy, including advancing lighter regulation for the sector and signing legislation affecting stablecoins — the exact product World Liberty Financial sells. His memecoin’s “dinner with the president” incentive structure blurs the line between commercial promotion and official access in ways that have no modern precedent. Ethics watchdog Kedric Payne at the Campaign Legal Center called it “the most unprecedented conflict of interest we have ever seen from a sitting president.” The White House denied any conflicts, saying all Trump actions were taken in the best interest of the American people.
What’s Next?
The disclosure is likely to intensify congressional scrutiny of Trump’s crypto activities and the GENIUS Act stablecoin legislation, which Democrats have argued creates a direct financial benefit for the president’s own World Liberty Financial. The collapse in the memecoin’s market cap — from $15 billion at launch to below $400 million — has already generated retail investor losses at scale and could draw regulatory attention from the SEC. The disclosure also excluded Trump’s sons’ ventures, meaning the full scope of the first family’s financial expansion during the second term remains partially opaque. Expect further legal and legislative challenges as the full picture continues to emerge.
Source: The Wall Street Journal









