“No title of Nobility shall be granted by the United States.”
— Article I, Section 9, U.S. Constitution
How much richer did each president get?
Most modern presidents enter office with modest wealth and grow it afterward through book deals and speaking fees. Trump is the first president in modern history to leverage the office itself—through business holdings, licensing deals, and crypto ventures—to multiply his fortune while still serving.
Sources: Forbes, financial disclosures, published estimates. Trump "current" reflects 2026 estimate including crypto holdings and Truth Social valuation.
Estimated Total Family & Inner Circle Enrichment
Combined estimated profits attributable to the presidency (both terms)
How each member of Trump’s inner circle profited from the presidency
Documented federal spending at Trump-owned properties
Sources: ProPublica, American Oversight FOIA, House Oversight Committee, CREW, HuffPost. Term 2 projections based on spending pace through mid-2025.
12 billionaires · $850 billion+ combined net worth
Trump’s second-term cabinet and senior appointees collectively represent more wealth than the GDP of most nations. The combined net worth exceeds the entire economic output of countries like Denmark, Singapore, or Hong Kong.
Sources: Forbes, Bloomberg Billionaires Index, Nasdaq, Public Citizen, Washington Post. Net worth figures are estimates based on public financial disclosures and asset valuations.
Where the money flows
$10B fee for brokering TikTok’s sale — 71% of the deal’s $14B valuation. Trump personally extended the ban deadline, guided negotiations with China, and collected $2.5B upfront with the rest in installments.
$TRUMP meme coin, World Liberty Financial, stablecoin business. Family receives 75% of proceeds. Launched while in office.
Kushner’s Affinity Partners received $2B from Saudi PIF. Additional Middle East investment fund connections.
DJT stock valuation. Trump holds majority stake in the media and technology company.
Federal spending on golf trips, Secret Service, foreign government bookings. Both terms combined.
Don Jr. and Eric meeting with 8+ foreign governments. $87M+ in international project income (2024).
34+ trademarks approved during Term 1, several timed to diplomatic events. New approvals in 2024.
The Pentagon’s senior officials came from — and still profit from — the defense contractors they now oversee
In 2025, the Department of Defense awarded a record $521 billion in unclassified contracts — a 9.3% increase from 2024. Trump ordered the department to “accelerate defense procurement” and operate like a business. The Pentagon now seeks $200B+ for the Iran war alone. Here’s who’s deciding where that money goes:
Billionaire co-founder of Cerberus Capital Management, connected to Jeffrey Epstein. “Divested” his stake by giving the firm to his adult children. Now overseeing the $151B Golden Dome missile defense system — which has already granted awards to Cerberus-affiliated firms.
VP of strategy at Lockheed Martin for nearly 20 years, where he still holds $5M+ in stock. Also president of Incisive Consulting, advising the National Security Space Association and rocket company GEOST ($100M in defense contracts).
22-year career at Ernst & Young, which has won $2.28B in defense contracts. Previously partner at IronGate Capital Group, a venture capital firm invested in defense firms with millions in active government contracts.
Advised defense contractor Talon Cyber Security, invested in the defense cybersecurity-focused Clear Sky Security Fund, and served as board member of Claroty, Ltd. — an Israeli cybersecurity firm connected to the IDF.
Board member of IDF veteran-founded HUB Cybersecurity. Director of GovBid AI (advises companies on winning government contracts), RobotLAB (security robotics), and Coda Octopus Group (submarine engineering, $7M in defense contracts).
Grandson of CIA Director William Colby. Longtime consultant to the Telemus Group, a national security consultancy awarded $20M+ in defense contracts, advising on “defense forecasting” and “wargaming.” Sen. Dan Sullivan: “The hardest guy to get a hold of in the Trump administration.”
Hypersonics consultant for Toyon Research Corporation, which has won $471M in defense contracts. Also advised Longshot Space Technologies, building the world’s largest hypersonic gun.
Still actively contracting for maritime defense contractor Regent, Inc., defense tech company Simerse, and defense contractor Vidrovr. Previously operating partner at Windage Partners LLC, a defense-focused private equity firm.
Combined, these 8 officials have financial ties to defense contractors holding billions in Pentagon awards. They now control procurement decisions for a department spending $521B/year in contracts — while the U.S. fights a $24B+ war with zero allied support and the Pentagon requests $200B+ more from Congress.