Melania Trump made 28 times greater income from NFTs in 2025 than in the year before, according to the 2026 annual federal disclosure report. Of her roughly $17 million in total earnings, she raked in $6 million from the digital collectibles. Under the page of the report listing her assets and income, the report states Melania Trump earned over $10.7 million from the “Melania” film, over $6 million from the sale of NFTs and other collectibles, and over half a million from her “Melania” memoir. The new report arrives in a wave of federally required financial disclosures that reveal a stunningly large amount of crypto-related holdings for the Trump family. The president and his sons alone added over $2 billion to the family coffers through their crypto ventures. The First Lady has launched multiple NFT collections over the past five years, with the previous disclosure report showing she made $216,710.74 from them in 2024, meaning that 2025’s figure was roughly 28 times larger. Melania announced the launch of her first NFT “Melania’s Vision” – a watercolor of her eyes – in December 2021, only available for purchase for the second half of that month. She said a portion of the proceeds would go toward children aging out of foster care. It cost $150. Her next NFT collection, “Head of State”, sold at auction for $180,000 in January 2022, but Bloomberg reported the blockchain evidence suggesting the transaction came from Melania’s wallet instead of another buyer. The opening bid for the NFT was $250,000. Her “POTUS TRUMP” NFT Collection also launched in 2022, priced at $50 each, to commemorate “important moments in our Nation’s history,” according to Melania, and she launched a similar USA themed collection in June 2023 with the same price tag.The Trump Organization and the White House did not immediately respond to Fortune’s requests for comment.Her website currently lists a Digital Collectibles section with sold-out NFTs: On The Move, The MetaRose, Women’s History Month Collection, Head Of State, and Melania’s Vision.This story was originally featured on Fortune.com