Key Takeaways
- Vice President JD Vance’s latest financial disclosure reveals Bitcoin valued between $250,001 and $500,000
- Vance stores his cryptocurrency on Coinbase rather than in self-custody
- His Bitcoin investment has expanded fivefold from his initial 2022 Senate filing
- President Trump’s disclosure documents more than $50 million in Bitcoin and $1 billion in cryptocurrency-related income
- Both administration leaders have advocated for Bitcoin adoption and clearer digital asset regulations
Vice President JD Vance’s 2025 annual financial disclosure documents cryptocurrency holdings valued between $250,001 and $500,000. The submission is an OGE Form 278e, a mandatory requirement for all high-ranking federal government officials filed annually.
Vance maintains his Bitcoin through a Coinbase exchange account. According to the filing, the position generated no reportable income, with no earnings exceeding $200 from the investment.
OGE disclosure regulations mandate that officials report asset values within predetermined ranges rather than exact amounts. Consequently, the document doesn’t specify the precise number of Bitcoin Vance possesses, his acquisition date, or the exact market valuation at filing time.
His Bitcoin holdings have expanded considerably over time. Vance’s initial disclosure as a 2022 Senate candidate listed the value between $100,001 and $250,000. When he submitted his filing as vice presidential nominee in 2024, it had increased to the $250,001 to $500,000 category, where it currently stands.
During his appearance at the Bitcoin 2025 Conference in Las Vegas, Vance informed attendees that he was among the few political candidates who actually owned Bitcoin during his Senate campaign. He confirmed maintaining a significant position in the cryptocurrency.
Complete Overview of Vance’s Financial Holdings
Bitcoin represents just a fraction of Vance’s complete investment portfolio. According to ProPublica’s analysis of his disclosure, his total reported assets range from approximately $6.1 million to potentially exceeding $22 million.
His most substantial investments consist of exchange-traded funds managed through Charles Schwab. These include holdings valued between $1 million and $5 million in both the Invesco QQQ Trust and the SPDR S&P 500 ETF.
The documentation also includes a promissory note from Narya Capital Management, Vance’s previous venture capital firm, worth $1 million to $5 million. He stepped down from his partnership role there following his Senate election.
Additional assets encompass Washington D.C. real estate, property holdings in Ohio and Kentucky, various retirement accounts, educational savings funds for his children, and continuing royalties from his memoir “Hillbilly Elegy.”
Regarding debts, Vance lists a Navy Federal Credit Union mortgage valued at $250,000 to $500,000 and maintains a Charles Schwab credit line.
Comparing President Trump’s Cryptocurrency Holdings
Trump’s disclosure, made public simultaneously, reveals substantially larger cryptocurrency exposure. He documented more than $50 million in self-custodied Bitcoin stored in cold storage, alongside over $1 billion in cryptocurrency-related revenue and proceeds.
In contrast to Vance, Trump maintains his Bitcoin outside traditional exchanges in cold storage wallets. Vance’s cryptocurrency remains on a regulated exchange platform and constitutes a relatively modest portion of his overall wealth.
Both administration officials have openly endorsed Bitcoin and advocated for enhanced regulatory clarity surrounding cryptocurrencies. The present administration has additionally supported establishing a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve as part of its comprehensive policy framework.
The 2025 OGE financial disclosures document the previous calendar year’s activities and carry a typical May deadline. Public compilation by organizations such as ProPublica often occurs several weeks afterward, explaining why these financial revelations attracted renewed attention on June 30, 2026.



