Wednesday, July 1, 2026 - US President Donald Trump recorded around $1.2 billion in income from his cryptocurrency activities in 2025, according to documents released on Tuesday by the US Office of Government Ethics.
A 1978 law requires the president and vice president of the
United States to declare their income as well as their assets.
According to the documents, which are more than 900 pages
long, Trump received nearly $`550 million from his ties to the startup World
Liberty Financial.
The Trump family lent its support and its name to this
cryptocurrency platform, launched in September 2024.
World Liberty Financial issued its own cryptocurrency, WLFI,
whose initial sale brought in `$550 million.
Trump and his three sons also obtained, via an intermediary
company, DT Marks Defi, an additional 22.5 billion WLFI, currently worth around
$`1.3 billion.
In April 2025, WLF also marketed its stablecoin — a digital
currency whose value is pegged to a traditional currency, in this case the
dollar.
Trump’s income disclosure also mentions $635 million in
royalties received under a licensing agreement related to the $TRUMP
cryptocurrency, launched just hours before his inauguration in January 2025.
The president’s activities in the cryptocurrency sector are
the main reason for the near tripling of his personal fortune, which rose from
`$2.3 billion to $6.5 billion between 2024 and 2026, according to Forbes.
The former real estate developer is regularly accused of
conflicts of interest, in particular for having invested in the crypto-currency
industry while as president taking several measures to deregulate the sector,
causing asset prices to soar.
Beyond the income derived from WLF and its cryptocurrency,
Trump has also earned several million dollars from shares in various publicly
listed companies active in cryptocurrencies, such as the Coinbase exchange
platform.
The president’s assets are held in a trust managed by his
son, Donald Trump Jr. But its bylaws stipulate that the entity can be dissolved
at any time, which means the billionaire could regain control of it as soon as
his second term ends.

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