President Donald Trump holds more than $50 million in Bitcoin stored offline in cold wallets, according to his 2025 annual financial disclosure released by the U.S. Office of Government Ethics. The filing marks the first public accounting of his personal crypto position since taking office in January.
The Bitcoin sits in a single wallet controlled by CIC Digital LLC, nested inside The Donald J. Trump Revocable Trust. The disclosure form caps reporting at the $50 million bracket, meaning the actual holding could be larger. The same trust also holds an Ethereum position valued between $5 million and $25 million, a staked Ethereum agreement with Coinbase that generated $510,808 in validator rewards, and USDC stablecoin holdings in the $5 million to $25 million range. Across Bitcoin and Ethereum alone, disclosed assets exceed $100 million.
The Bitcoin line reported no income for the period, consistent with a position held rather than sold. The cold-storage designation means private keys remain offline, outside internet-connected systems and third-party custody. Vice President JD Vance separately disclosed Bitcoin holdings valued between $250,000 and $500,000.
Crypto ventures and token revenues
A second set of holdings appears under entities tied to World Liberty Financial, a decentralized-finance venture carrying the Trump name. Those wallets report another Bitcoin key in the $50 million-plus bracket, an Ethereum key at the same ceiling, and other crypto positions. The World Liberty cluster recorded more than $236 million in net proceeds from token sales, plus a $150 million income figure on the Ethereum line.
The filing also shows a $635 million royalty payment linked to a meme-coin licensing agreement with Celebration Coins through CIC Digital LLC. An affiliated entity, DTTM Operations LLC, lists 15.75 billion World Liberty governance tokens valued at the disclosure's top bracket. Bitcoin Magazine's aggregation of multiple wallet entries in the filing totals more than $500 million in proceeds tied to World Liberty and $1 billion in crypto-related revenue overall, though the filing does not break these out as single line items.
The disclosure gap
The bracket system leaves significant blind spots. The filing reveals no acquisition date, cost basis, or year-to-year changes in the Bitcoin holding. It also does not specify whether the $236 million and larger figures represent net income to Trump or gross proceeds distributed through his ventures. The form's ceiling at $50 million, while sufficient to flag a major position, obscures the precise scale of holdings above that threshold.
Trump's administration has positioned itself as sympathetic to the crypto industry and has signaled intent to establish federal policy on digital-asset reserves. The president's substantial personal holdings in assets his government now regulates create a direct intersection of financial interest and policy authority that federal disclosure rules have now made public.