The president's new annual filing is nearly four times as lengthy as last year's disclosure and shows crypto income in the hundreds of millions
President Donald Trump speaks Monday in the Oval Office.
The U.S. government on Tuesday released President Donald Trump's annual financial disclosure, showing vast and expanding holdings in stocks, real estate in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, as well as hundreds of millions of dollars of income from cryptocurrency ventures.
The 927-page disclosure is nearly four times as lengthy as the prior year's annual filing, which covered 234 pages. Trump returned to the White House in January 2025.
The sources of income listed include $635 million from royalties due to a licensing agreement with "Celebration Coins," and more than $500 million from token sales distributed by World Liberty Financial LLC, a crypto company founded by Trump, his sons and other partners. One such sale alone resulted in proceeds of $236 million, while another netted $151 million, according the disclosure filing.
Trump's stock holdings include stakes worth between $5 million and $25 million in Apple $(AAPL)$ and the State Street S&P 500 ETF SPY, as well as positions worth between $1 million and $5 million in Macy's (M) and Palantir Technologies (PLTR), the disclosure shows. Trump's vast stock holdings also include a large exposure to foreign stocks and international funds. The president's overall net worth before this filing was estimated by Forbes to be $6.5 billion.
Other income listed includes $4.7 million from royalties related to Trump Watches. Trump listed real-estate licensing fees of $5 million from a venture in Romania, $5.25 million from a venture in Qatar and $10 million from a venture in the United Arab Emirates.
In a section of the disclosure focused on gifts and travel reimbursements, there are 10 Super Bowl tickets listed for $50,000, along with pricey tickets for other sporting events, such as those put on by the UFC, the Daytona 500 and the FIFA World Cup.
A spokesperson for the Trump Organization offered a statement when asked to comment on Tuesday's filing.
"This disclosure once again demonstrates that the Trump Organization continues to maintain a strong financial position, supported by world class, valuable assets, substantial liquidity and a conservative balance sheet," the statement said. "Our debt remains incredibly low relative to the size and strength of our overall portfolio, reflecting an extremely underleveraged financial position. The breadth and depth of this filing further underscores our commitment to transparency. At nearly 1,000 pages, it represents one of the most comprehensive financial disclosure reports ever submitted and demonstrates a level of financial transparency unmatched in presidential history."
Presidents are exempt from conflict-of-interest rules that prohibit federal officials from having a role in government matters in which they have a financial stake. But Trump's predecessors have relied on blind trusts, divestments or investments in diversified mutual funds and Treasury bills to limit ethical concerns to limit ethical concerns.
-Victor Reklaitis
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June 30, 2026 18:48 ET (22:48 GMT)
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