U.S. President Donald Trump reported more than $1.4 billion in income from cryptocurrency ventures in 2025, showing how digital assets have become one of the largest drivers of his personal financial disclosures.
TL;DR
- Trump reported over $1.4 billion in income tied to crypto ventures in 2025.
- The biggest sources included Celebration Coins royalties and World Liberty Financial-linked proceeds.
- The filing also showed large crypto wallet holdings and World Liberty governance tokens.
- The figures are drawing renewed scrutiny over crypto policy and presidential business interests.
The details surfaced in Trump’s annual public financial disclosure, released through the U.S. Office of Government Ethics. The filing identifies Trump as President of the United States, covers the 2025 annual reporting year, and was received by OGE on June 29, 2026.
The largest single crypto-linked entry came through CIC Digital LLC, described in the disclosure as covering license fees for NFTs and meme coins. CIC Digital reported $635.1 million in royalties from a license agreement with Celebration Coins. The same section also listed crypto wallet holdings including Bitcoin valued at over $50 million, Ethereum valued between $5 million and $25 million, and USDC holdings valued between $5 million and $25 million.
World Liberty Financial-linked entities accounted for another major chunk. The filing shows DT Marks Defi LLC held a 38.25% ownership interest in WLF Holdco LLC, along with $65.6 million in net proceeds from an equity sale and $236.3 million from token sales distributed by World Liberty Financial. Other crypto wallet entries connected to World Liberty distributions included proceeds tied to USD, USDC, Ethereum, Bitcoin, LINK, AAVE, ENA, MOVE, and ONDO holdings.
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Another linked entry, DT Marks SC LLC, reported $196.9 million in net proceeds from capital contributions by new members of Stablecoin Holdco LLC and the sale of Class C units. Reuters reported that Trump’s crypto income topped $1.4 billion, with World Liberty Financial and Trump-branded meme coin income making up much of the figure.
The disclosure lands after World Liberty Financial spent much of 2025 expanding its crypto footprint. In March 2025, the company announced USD1, a dollar-pegged stablecoin backed by short-term U.S. government treasuries, U.S. dollar deposits, and other cash equivalents. WLFI co-founder Zach Witkoff said USD1 was designed for sovereign investors and major institutions seeking cross-border digital dollar transactions.
Trump’s meme coin operation also remained central to the filing. The official Trump meme coin website says there were 200 million TRUMP tokens available on day one, rising to a total supply of 1 billion over three years. It also says CIC Digital LLC and Fight Fight Fight LLC collectively own 80% of the Trump cards, subject to a three-year unlocking schedule, and receive trading revenue from Trump Meme Cards.
The policy backdrop matters too. In 2025, Trump signed the GENIUS Act, which the White House said would provide clear rules for stablecoins and attract more digital asset activity to the U.S. The White House also pointed to Trump’s March 2025 executive order creating a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and U.S. Digital Asset Stockpile.
That overlap between policy and personal income is likely to keep fueling scrutiny. For now, the filing makes one thing clear: Trump’s business base has shifted well beyond traditional real estate and licensing. In 2025, crypto became a defining line item of his financial empire.

