
Trump's latest financial disclosure shows he earned over $1.4 billion from crypto ventures in 2025, dwarfing his real estate income. The figure renews scrutiny of his digital-asset policy influence.
President Donald Trump earned more than $1.4 billion from cryptocurrency businesses in 2025, according to his latest annual financial disclosure. Digital assets now make up the majority of his personal income, dwarfing his conventional real estate and hospitality ventures.
World Liberty Financial, the crypto platform backed by Trump and his family, brought in over $594 million through token sales during the reporting period. Trump’s memecoin business, CIC Digital LLC, reported approximately $636 million in income. Royalty payments from a licensing deal with Celebration Coins accounted for almost all of that revenue. The company’s cryptocurrency wallets held digital assets worth more than $60 million.
Trump also claimed nearly $197 million from the sale of an ownership stake in Stablecoin Holdco. World Liberty Financial has since launched USD1, a dollar-pegged stablecoin, and continues to generate revenue through sales of its WLF token.
By comparison, his Mar-a-Lago Club brought in just over $77 million for the year.
The filing renewed scrutiny of potential conflicts of interest. Trump has not divested his crypto holdings or placed them into a blind trust. His administration continues to shape U.S. digital-asset policy, including the ongoing debate over whether to shift crypto oversight to the CFTC via the CLARITY Act. Critics argue the overlap between public office and private financial interests is direct and unavoidable.
For crypto markets, the disclosure reveals a president whose personal wealth is tied to the same industry his regulators oversee. World Liberty Financial’s stablecoin launch and the Trump family’s deep involvement in token sales mean any policy change affecting stablecoins or digital asset offerings would touch the president’s own balance sheet. That dynamic could constrain the administration from taking a hard line on enforcement, or conversely, invite more aggressive scrutiny from Congress and ethics watchdogs.
The disclosure covered income through the end of 2025. Trump’s next financial filing is due in 2026.
Prepared with AlphaScala research tooling and grounded in primary market data: live prices, fundamentals, SEC filings, hedge-fund holdings, and insider activity. Each story is checked against AlphaScala publishing rules before release. Educational coverage, not personalized advice.