Wealth & Disclosure · OGE

Donald Trump's Net Worth, by His Own Disclosure

Every president files a federal financial disclosure — an itemized list of what they own and earn. We read President Trump's in full. It reports roughly $645 million in income, a net worth of $4.2–$5.8 billion, a first-ever $57 million from a cryptocurrency, a portfolio of 575 individual stocks including nine defense contractors — and a sitting president buying a municipal bond almost every business day. We show the money; you draw the conclusions.

Source: U.S. Office of Government Ethics · Form 278e (annual) + 278T (transactions) Filing: 2025 annual + 2025–26 periodic Published:
$4.2–5.8B
Net Worth (Disclosed Range)
OGE filing + Forbes
~$645M
Reported Income
latest annual filing
$57.4M
Crypto Token Income
a first for any president
575
Individual Stocks Held
incl. 9 defense contractors
$57.4M

For the first time in the history of the disclosure system, a sitting U.S. president reported eight figures of income from a cryptocurrency tied to his own brand — while his administration writes the rules for crypto.

World Liberty Financial · “token sales” · OGE Form 278e, 2025 annual filing
The Document

The Filing Every President Has to Make — Finally Readable

Official White House portrait of President Donald J. Trump, January 2025
President Donald J. Trump. Official White House portrait, Jan 2025 · Public domain (Daniel Torok / The White House)

For more than a decade, the individual stock trades of members of Congress have been public and searchable. The executive branch files the same kind of paperwork. The President, the Vice President and every Cabinet member submit a financial disclosure to the U.S. Office of Government Ethics (OGE): an annual snapshot of what they own and earn (Form 278e), plus a report every time they buy or sell (Form 278T). Those documents are public — they're just scanned PDFs with no database and no search.

So we parsed them. Every figure on this page comes from President Trump's own OGE filings, with the headline numbers pinned to a single document: his most recent annual disclosure. We report what it says.

This isn't only about one man. Every president and Cabinet secretary files these. We're starting with the President because his is the largest and most consequential disclosure in government — but the same records exist for the entire Cabinet, and we track them the same way we track Congress.
The Number

How Much Is Donald Trump Worth?

The honest answer is a range. The OGE form records each asset in a bracket that tops out at “over $50,000,000” — so a property worth $300 million and one worth $51 million look identical on paper. Add up those capped brackets and you get a floor of about $1.6 billion. That is not his net worth; it is the lowest number the form can express. Drawing on the disclosure and on Forbes' independent estimate, the fuller range is $4.15 billion to $5.84 billion, concentrated in real-estate LLCs and partnerships.

Why we don't print a single number. Anyone citing one exact net-worth figure from an OGE filing is guessing past the $50M cap. The defensible statement is the range — and that the disclosed-asset floor alone clears $1.6 billion.
The Income

Where the $645 Million Comes From

Unlike the asset brackets, Trump's businesses report exact income figures. In his latest annual filing they add up to roughly $645 million. The shape of it is unmistakable: this is a hospitality and real-estate fortune, with two modern additions — foreign brand-licensing and, for the first time, cryptocurrency.

The single biggest earners

The largest line items in the filing, by reported income:

EntityWhat it isReported income
Trump Endeavor 12Doral golf resort, Miami$110.4M
World Liberty Financial CryptoToken sales$57.4M
Mar-a-Lago ClubResort, Palm Beach$50.1M
Lamington Farm ClubBedminster golf club, NJ$33.1M
Trump Int'l Golf ClubWest Palm Beach, FL$29.1M
Jupiter Golf ClubJupiter, FL$28.1M
Trump Ruffin Tower ILas Vegas hotel / condo sales$22.1M
Trump Nat'l Golf Club DCWashington, DC$20.8M
The Trump CorporationManagement & related fees$17.0M
DT Marks KSA Saudi ArabiaBrand license fee$15.9M
Foreign money is on the record. The filing lists brand-licensing fees from Saudi Arabia (DT Marks KSA, $15.9M) and Dubai (about $10.2M across two entities) — income flowing to the President's companies from foreign partners while he holds office. It is disclosed and legal; it is also exactly the kind of foreign-revenue tie the disclosure system exists to make visible.

What $645 Million Looks Like

The income lines above aren't abstractions — they're golf courses, resorts, a Palm Beach club and a Fifth-Avenue tower. Four of the assets behind the number:

Trump National Doral golf resort clubhouse near Miami, Florida
Trump National Doral
$110.4M income
Golf resort · Miami, FL — the single biggest earner in the filing.
Photo: Andreas Sandberg / CC BY-SA 3.0
Mar-a-Lago club and residence in Palm Beach, Florida
Mar-a-Lago Club
$50.1M income
Private club & residence · Palm Beach, FL.
Photo: Jud McCranie / CC BY-SA 4.0
Trump Turnberry hotel and golf resort in Ayrshire, Scotland
Trump Turnberry
Golf resort & hotel · Ayrshire, Scotland — an Open Championship venue.
Photo: Billy McCrorie / CC BY-SA 2.0
Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, New York
Trump Tower
Trump Organization HQ · Fifth Avenue, NYC — home of The Trump Corporation.
Photo: Martin Dürrschnabel / CC BY-SA 2.5
Property photographs are public-domain or Creative Commons works from Wikimedia Commons, credited per image and linked to source. Income figures are from the OGE Form 278e annual filing.
The First

A Sitting President's First Crypto Income: $57 Million

One line in the filing has never appeared in any president's disclosure before. It reports $57,355,532 in “token sales” income from World Liberty Financial, the crypto venture tied to the Trump brand. The disclosure also records World Liberty governance tokens and a cryptocurrency wallet holding Ethereum (valued in the $1–$5 million range). Separately, his stake in Trump Media & Technology Group (NASDAQ: DJT) is disclosed at “over $50,000,000.”

This is the genuinely new thing. Real estate, golf and licensing are decades old. A sitting U.S. president reporting eight figures of income from a cryptocurrency he helped launch — while his administration sets crypto policy — has no precedent in the disclosure record.
What He Holds

575 Stocks — Including Nine Defense Contractors

Beyond the businesses, the disclosure lists a large securities portfolio: 575 distinct companies, held across multiple professionally managed accounts. Most are ordinary blue chips. Ten are defense contractors — the companies that build the weapons the President, as Commander-in-Chief, commands and whose budgets he signs.

What this shows — defense and other notable individual equities held in the 2025 annual disclosure, with the highest value bracket disclosed for each. The accounts are professionally managed; the values are the form's bracketed maximums.
CompanyTickerSectorDisclosed up to
Lockheed MartinLMTDefense$250,000
RTX (Raytheon)RTXDefense$50,000
BoeingBADefense$50,000
PalantirPLTRDefense$50,000
Northrop GrummanNOCDefense$15,000
L3HarrisLHXDefense$15,000
LeidosLDOSDefense$15,000
TransDigmTDGDefense$15,000
TeledyneTDYDefense$1,000
NVIDIANVDASemiconductors$1,000,000
ExxonMobilXOMEnergy$100,000

The portfolio also includes 15 pharmaceutical companies and a long list of financial, industrial and consumer names — the signature of diversified managed accounts rather than hand-picked bets.

This is 11 names out of 575.

See the full portfolio — every holding, every bracket — plus the same disclosure lens on the rest of the Cabinet and all 538 members of Congress. Free to start, no card required.

See What's Inside →
What He Trades

A Municipal Bond Almost Every Business Day

What he holds and what he trades are two different stories. The periodic transaction reports — the executive-branch equivalent of a congressional trade filing — show roughly 695 transactions since he took office. Only four of more than 800 lifetime purchases carry a stock ticker. The rest are bonds — overwhelmingly municipal bonds, the tax-exempt debt of states, cities, school districts and water authorities. Through the fall of 2025 the pace was relentless: a municipal-bond purchase on nearly every business day, in blocks from $50,000 to several million, across dozens of states.

It is the most conservative trading pattern imaginable — and a quiet conflict surface. Government debt, not stock picks. But it is also a sitting president steadily buying the obligations of the same state and local governments his administration funds. We state the timing as fact and allege nothing about it.

The President isn't the only one filing.

Every Cabinet secretary files the same 278e and 278T reports — Lutnick, Bessent, Rubio and the rest. We read and score all of them, side by side.

See the Cabinet's Trades →
The Trust

Is It in a Blind Trust?

Trump's assets are held in a revocable trust managed by his adult sons. That is not the same as a qualified blind trust — the legal arrangement, certified by the Office of Government Ethics, designed so an official genuinely cannot know what he owns or trades. OGE and outside ethics groups have noted, in his first term and since, that the Trump trust does not meet that definition: the assets are known, branded with his name, and run by his family. Presidents are not bound by the conflict-of-interest statute that covers other officials, so this is permitted — which is precisely why the disclosure itself is the public's main window.

The Comparison

How It Stacks Up Against Congress

Congress has its own multi-millionaires and a handful of billionaires — we rank all 538 of them from the same kind of disclosure. But the President's filing operates on a different scale: his disclosed-asset floor alone clears $1.6 billion, and the fuller $4.2–$5.8 billion range puts him above the entire top of the congressional net-worth leaderboard. The sharper difference isn't the size — it's the rules. Members of Congress are bound by the STOCK Act and the conflict-of-interest statute; the President is exempt from both. The disclosure is the only check that still applies.

Where would Trump rank in Congress?

See all 538 members ranked by net worth, assets and debts — straight from their financial disclosures — and judge the scale for yourself.

Open the Net-Worth Leaderboard →
The Method

How We Count It

Every figure aggregates parsed line items from President Trump's OGE filings. Income, asset and stock-holding figures are pinned to his most recent annual Form 278e; trading figures come from his 278T periodic transaction reports covering 2025–2026. Income figures are the exact amounts his businesses report. Asset figures use the form's brackets, which cap at “over $50,000,000” per asset — so asset sums are conservative floors, and we cite the Forbes/OGE range for net worth rather than a single number. Repeated holdings of the same stock reflect separate managed accounts and are counted as distinct positions, not duplicates.

Scope & caveats. OGE brackets understate large assets by design; treat the $1.6B asset sum as a floor. Figures reflect the latest filing parsed as of June 2026 and may be superseded by later amendments. GovGreed reports what the disclosures say and draws no legal conclusions about any person.

The President is only the start.

Trump files the largest disclosure in government — but every Cabinet secretary and all 538 members of Congress file the same paperwork. We read it, score it, and track every new filing the day it posts. Start free, no card required.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Donald Trump's net worth?
His OGE filing caps each asset at “over $50,000,000,” so the raw sum of the brackets — about $1.6 billion — is a floor, not the real number. The fuller range, from the disclosure and Forbes, is $4.15 billion to $5.84 billion, concentrated in real-estate LLCs and partnerships.
How much income did Trump report, and from where?
About $645 million in his latest annual filing. The largest source by far is golf courses and resorts (Doral, Mar-a-Lago, Turnberry, Bedminster), then hotels, rent, brand licensing and royalties — including foreign license fees from Saudi Arabia and Dubai — and, for the first time, $57.4 million in crypto token sales.
Does Trump earn money from cryptocurrency?
Yes. His 2025 disclosure reports $57,355,532 in token-sales income from World Liberty Financial, plus governance tokens and an Ethereum wallet. It is the first time a sitting president's disclosure has reported income from a cryptocurrency he helped launch.
Does Trump own individual stocks, including defense companies?
Yes. The disclosure lists 575 distinct stocks across managed accounts, including nine defense contractors — Lockheed Martin (up to $250,000), RTX, Boeing, Palantir, Northrop Grumman, L3Harris, Leidos and TransDigm — plus a NVIDIA position up to $1 million. The accounts are professionally managed and held in a trust run by his sons.
What does Trump actually buy and sell while in office?
Overwhelmingly municipal bonds. His periodic transaction reports show ~695 transactions since taking office; only four of 800+ lifetime purchases carry a stock ticker. In the fall of 2025 he reported a muni-bond purchase on nearly every business day, across dozens of states.
Are Trump's assets in a blind trust?
No. They are in a revocable trust run by his adult sons, which OGE and ethics groups have noted is not a qualified blind trust. Presidents are exempt from the conflict-of-interest statute that binds other officials, so this is allowed — which is why the disclosure itself is the main public check.
Where does this data come from?
Entirely from President Trump's own filings with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics — the annual Form 278e and periodic Form 278T — the same public disclosures every president and Cabinet member must file. GovGreed parsed and organized them. We report what the documents say.
How does Trump's net worth compare to Congress?
It is not close. The richest members of Congress disclose net worths in the hundreds of millions to low billions; Trump's disclosed-asset floor alone is $1.6 billion and his fuller range is $4.2–$5.8 billion — above the entire top of the congressional net-worth leaderboard. The bigger difference: members of Congress are bound by the STOCK Act and conflict-of-interest law; the President is exempt from both. See the full Congressional Net Worth Leaderboard →
Can I track the rest of the Trump Cabinet?
Yes. Every Cabinet secretary and senior White House official files the same OGE disclosures, and we track them the same way — holdings, income and every periodic transaction report. See the Trump Cabinet's stock trades →, or start free to follow new filings as they post.

More money trails: AIPAC money in Congress · Congress trading leaderboard · Congressional trading stats

About this data. Figures are parsed from President Donald J. Trump's filings with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics — the annual Form 278e and periodic Form 278T transaction reports. Income, asset and holdings figures are pinned to the most recent annual filing; trading figures span 2025–2026. Asset brackets cap at “over $50,000,000,” so asset sums are conservative floors. Source: U.S. Office of Government Ethics; net-worth range corroborated by Forbes.

Not financial advice. All data from public federal disclosures. GovGreed reports disclosed financial information and does not allege that any person violated any law.