Donald Trump and Bitcoin: From ‘Not a Fan’ to Crypto President
October 5, 2025
In brief
- Donald Trump is back in the White House as the 47th U.S. President, after running on a pro-crypto platform.
- But Trump hasn’t always taken this stance: He used to call Bitcoin a “scam” and said he wasn’t a fan.
- Trump has since launched his own Solana meme coin, multiple NFT collections, and a DeFi project.
Bitcoin-friendly Donald Trump won was inaugurated in January as the 47th President of the United States of America. But ahead of being formally sworn in, the commander in chief dropped a meme coin.
Yes, you read that right. Running on the Solana network, the TRUMP token at one point had a market cap of $14 billion. Itâs since plunged to $1.5 billion, but the move signaled the new Presidentâs growing enthusiasm for the digital asset space after campaigning to help Bitcoiners and the fast-moving sphere as a whole.
Trump branded himself as a crypto-friendly candidate ahead of Novemberâs divisive election, bringing in millions of dollars in cash and digital asset donations from Silicon Valley tech leaders. And then he won.
But it wasnât always like this: President Trump was once a staunch crypto critic. So how did we get here?
Trumpâs most defining early comment on cryptocurrency dates back to 2019, when as president he made it clear he didnât like Bitcoin.Â
âI am not a fan of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, which are not money, and whose value is highly volatile and based on thin air,â he said on Twitter at the time, before slamming Facebookâs plans for a digital currency.Â
âWe have only one real currency in the USA, and it is stronger than ever, both dependable and reliable,â he added. âIt is by far the most dominant currency anywhere in the world, and it will always stay that way. It is called the United States dollar!â
Trump reiterated his beliefs during a Bitcoin bull run in 2021. âBitcoin just seems like a scam,â he said on Fox Business, repeating that he wanted the dollar to be the worldâs top currency.
Entering the NFT world
It took a long time for him to explicitly say he liked the top cryptocurrency, and the journey started with an unlikely crypto craze: NFT collectibles.Â
By the end of 2021, after Trump had left the White House, his wife Melania announced her plans for a Solana-based NFT collection. Solana Labs clarified that it had nothing to do with the collection launching on the blockchain, and Trump continued to slam crypto as âdangerousâ despite his wifeâs venture.Â
The next year, however, the commander-in-chief launched his own NFT collection. Minted on Ethereum scaling network Polygon, the digital trading card collection was at first ridiculedâbut it still sold out quickly and made millions of dollars.Â
Trump later said that he only launched the collection because he thought they were âsort of cute.â He has since launched more collections on Polygon, and even minted some of the third set on Bitcoin via the Ordinals protocol. A fourth collection launched in August 2024 with the largest number of NFTs to date, though less than 10% of the available total was ultimately minted.
Trump has even claimed that the success of his NFT collections, and the surprising number of buyers who used cryptocurrency rather than fiat currency, helped change his perspective on Bitcoin and cryptocurrency.
A digital wallet tied to the President by blockchain analytics firm Arkham Intelligence shows that he has raked in millions in royalties from the NFTsâand also holds some of the biggest unofficial Trump meme coins, which likely were sent to the wallet without Trump’s knowledge or consent.
Trump’s crypto embrace
But it was just last year when Trump really upped the pro-crypto talk. âI make money with it, I have fun with it too,â Trump said in a March 2024 interview with CNBCâs Squawk Box. âCrazy new currencies, thatâs what I call them.â
Then, while hosting holders of his NFTs at his Mar-a-Lago resort in May 2024, he told the crowd he was âgood withâ cryptoâand slammed Biden and the Democrats for being âagainst it.â Many saw the event as a turning point in crypto policy conversations.
Rumors spread that month that the worldâs richest man and biggest donor to the Trump campaign, Elon Musk, had been advising the presidential hopeful on a crypto strategy. (Musk denied the reports.) That July, the Republican party issued a draft party platform that explicitly mentioned cryptoâa first for the industry.
After surviving an assassination attempt, the business mogul and former reality TV star earned Muskâs public endorsement, as well as support from many other prominent names in the digital asset space. And major crypto figures like the Winklevoss twins of Gemini and Kraken founder Jesse Powell donated sizable sums to Trump.
Trump then selected Senator J.D. Vance as his pick for running mate, with the Vice President seen at the time as a pro-crypto candidate who previously disclosed Bitcoin holdings of between $100,000 and $250,000 back in 2021.
But the most tangible sign of Trumpâs growing embrace of crypto came when he spoke at the 2024 Bitcoin Conference in Nashville, Tennessee. There, he promised the crowd that he would build a âstrategic Bitcoin stockpileâ for the country and that his plan was to turn the U.S. into the âcrypto capital of the planet.â
The Trump family then teased a decentralized finance (DeFi) project dubbed World Liberty Financial, with Trump himself posting multiple social media teasers during the initial rollout.
The Presidentâs son Donald Jr. said that the crypto platform will be egalitarian. âFor too long, the average American has been squeezed by the big banks and financial elites. It’s time we take a standâtogether,â he said on Twitter (aka X).
Then, a day after the second attempt on his life, Trump launched the project during a live interview with Rug Radio (Decryptâs sister company). World Liberty Financial aims to offer borrowing and lending services for cryptocurrencies on Ethereumâs network.
As crypto token launches go, the project was a bit of a flop right out of the gate, only managing to sell 4% of its allotted tokens during its launch. But sales ticked up substantially ahead of Trump’s inauguration, with the rest of the allotment selling out on January 20âthe day he returned to the White House. Decrypt then reported that the World Liberty Financial project had launched its own stablecoin.
The Republican also has more crypto people on his team. Bitcoin bull Robert F. Kennedy Jr. suspended his campaign to endorse Trump, and then joined Trumpâs transition team. Now he’s the Secretary of Health and Human Services. Orange-pilled Cantor Fitzgerald CEO Howard Lutnick is also part of Trumpâs political squad, now serving as Secretary of Commerce.
Elsewhere, noted Dogecoin fan Elon Musk led the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), a program to slash budgets and cut jobs across the government. He has since stepped down from the role amid a messy public break-up with Trump.
Crypto ambitions grow
Trump last year became the first current or former President of the U.S.âthat we know ofâto have used Bitcoin to buy something: At the popular New York City crypto bar, PubKey, the ex-President bought a burger using the cryptocurrency.
âItâs the beginning of a new era,â he said, referring to the digital asset industry. And it wasnât just talk: On January 17, he launched a meme coin running on Solana, and the token is now one of the most valuable meme coins in existence.
The TRUMP token launch has been widely criticized by politicians and analysts, and is seen by some as a potential avenue for corruption. But while the price is down sharply from the peak, it has continued to see trading demand, including in April when Trump revealed plans to host an exclusive dinner for top TRUMP holders.
Trump’s exclusive dinnerâheld in May for the top 220 holders of the meme coinâwas a quaint event, according to attendees who spoke to Decrypt, and the president only made a brief appearance. VIP attendees, who got a special tour alongside access to the event, held an average of $4.8 million worth of TRUMP to get a top spot at the party.
But the Republican, in his several five months in office, has made other, more serious campaign pledges a reality: He established a strategic Bitcoin reserve and became the first president to sign a crypto-related bill into lawâending the IRSâs so-called DeFi broker rule, which could have imperiled the development of crypto apps in America.
Trumpâs SEC has also scrapped numerous lawsuits and against crypto companies from the previous administration, and his family is continuing toâalbeit controversiallyâpush ahead with its own crypto ventures: Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump are launched American Bitcoin, a collaboration with Bitcoin mining firm Hut8 that plans to become the âworldâs largest and most efficient Bitcoin miner.â
The Trump sons are also planning to launch a crypto wallet via their World Liberty Financial project. Initially, the TRUMP meme coin team said it would launch its own Trump-themed wallet, but that plan was canceled after a public (but short-lived) dispute with Eric, Barron, and Don Jr. (The Trump family, interestingly, appears to have reduced its stake in World Liberty.)
More symbolically, Trump and his family have spoken out against big banks and what they deem to be censorship. In an August executive order, the president prohibited the debanking of crypto-related companies, siding with industry leaders who’d previously complained about being mistreated by the TradFi world.
Trumpâs media company Trump Media and Technology Group in March also signed an agreement to team with Crypto.com to offer ETFs, with Trump Media itself planning to invest its own money into the products. The companies have since teamed up to launch a treasury for Crypto.com’s Cronos (CRO) token, which will also be used across Trump Media’s Truth Social platforms. On top of all that, Trump Media bought $2 billion worth of Bitcoin and related securities in July after raising billions to do so.
Trump critics have argued that the presidentâs digital asset ventures constitute a conflict of interest; Silicon Valley bigwigs say heâs pro-innovation. One thing is for sure, though: President Trump has gone all-in on crypto, shrugging off his past perspective on the industry.
And he’s earned plenty of fans in the processâsome of whom briefly erected a golden statue of Trump holding a Bitcoin in Washington D.C. in September.
Editor’s note: This story was originally published on July 19, 2024 and last updated with new info on October 5, 2025.
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