President Donald Trump is reporting more than $1.4 billion in income tied to cryptocurrency ventures over the past year, according to federal financial disclosures reviewed in a Reuters report filed June 30. The figures place digital assets at the center of what has become one of the most closely watched financial disclosures in modern U.S. politics.
The filings, submitted to the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, outline a dramatic shift in how the president’s income is being generated — away from traditional real estate and licensing deals and toward crypto-linked enterprises operated alongside members of his family.
At the core of the earnings is World Liberty Financial, a cryptocurrency venture co-founded by Trump and his sons. The disclosure attributes more than $500 million in revenue to the firm, largely driven by token sales and asset transactions that have drawn intense scrutiny from ethics experts and political observers.
Another major source of income comes from the sale of $TRUMP-branded meme coins, which alone are reported to have generated hundreds of millions of dollars in proceeds. Combined with additional crypto-related licensing and digital asset activity, the total surpasses $1.4 billion.
The disclosure also points to broader earnings beyond crypto, including revenue from media settlements and international licensing agreements involving Trump-branded properties. Still, it is the scale of the cryptocurrency gains that has reshaped the financial picture most sharply.
The findings arrive at a time when Trump’s business interests and public policy positions continue to intersect in ways that fuel ongoing debate in Washington over conflicts of interest and the growing influence of digital asset markets in political life.