MONEYPresidential LifeAdd TopicThe net worth of all US presidents from Washington to Trump24/7 Wall St. examined the finances of every American president, from George Washingtonto Donald Trump. For the purposes of comparison, we provided net worth figures for each president in current dollars. Because a number of presidents, particularly in the early 19th century, made and lost huge fortunes in a matter of a few years, we only provided each president's net worth at their peak.Photo By Ron Sachs-Pool / Getty ImagesGeorge Washington. Term: 1789-1797 (1st president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $587.0 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesJohn AdamsNational Gallery Of ArtThomas Jefferson. Term: 1801-1809 (3rd president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $236.8 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesJames Madison. Term: 1809-1817 (4th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $113.3 million.National Archives / Getty ImagesJames Monroe.APJohn Quincy Adams. Term: 1825-1829 (6th president) Peak net worth (in current dollars): $23.3 million.National Archives/ Newsmakers / Getty ImagesAndrew Jackson. Term: 1829-1837 (7th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $132.6 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesMartin Van Buren. Term: 1837-1841 (8th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $29.3 million.National Archives / NewsmakersWilliam Henry Harrison. Term: 1841 (9th president) Peak net worth (in current dollars): $6.1 million.National Archive / NewsmakersJohn Tyler. Term: 1841-1845 (10th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $57.7 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesJames Knox Polk. Term: 1845-1849 (11th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $11.1 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesZachary Taylor. Term: 1849-1850) (12th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $7.1 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesMillard Fillmore. Term: 1850-1853) (13th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $4 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesFranklin Pierce. Term: 1853-1857) (14th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $2.0 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesJames Buchanan. Term: 1857-1861 (15th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): < $1 million.National Archives / Getty ImagesAbraham Lincoln. Term: 1861-1865 (16th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): < $1 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesAndrew Johnson. Term: 1865-1869 (17th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): < $1 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesUlysses Simpson Grant. Term: 1869-1877 (18th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): < $1 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesRutherford Birchard Hayes. Term: 1877-1881) (19th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $3 million.National Archives / Newsmakers / Getty ImagesJames Abram Garfield. Term: 1881-1881 (20th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): < $1 million.National Archives / Getty ImagesChester Alan Arthur. Term: 1881-1885 (21st president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): < $1 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesGrover Cleveland. Term: 1885-1889, 1893-1897 (22nd, 24th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $28.3 million.National Archives / Newsmakers / Getty ImagesBenjamin Harrison. Term: 1889-1893) (23rd president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $6.1 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesWilliam McKinley. Term: 1897-1901) (25th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $1 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesTheodore Roosevelt. Term: 1901-1909 (26th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $139.7 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesWilliam Howard Taft. Term: 1909-1913 (27th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $3 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesWoodrow Wilson. Term: 1913-1921 (28th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): < $1 million.Topical Press Agency / Getty ImagesWarren Gamaliel Harding. Term: 1921-1923) (29th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $1 million.Topical Press Agency / Getty ImagesCalvin Coolidge. Term: 1923-1929 (30th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): < $1 million.General Photographic Agency / Getty ImagesHerbert Clark Hoover.Term: 1929-1933 (31st president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $83 million.Topical Press Agency / Getty ImagesFranklin Delano Roosevelt. Term: 1933-1945 (32nd president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $66.8 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesHarry S. Truman. Term: 1945-1953 (33rd president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): < $1 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesDwight David Eisenhower. Term: 1953-1961 (34th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $9.1 million.Topical Press Agency / Getty ImagesJohn Fitzgerald Kennedy. Term: 1961-1963 (35th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $1.1 billion.National Archive / Newsmakers / Getty ImagesLyndon Baines Johnson. Term: 1963-1969 (36th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $109.3 million.Central Press / Getty ImagesRichard Milhous Nixon. Term: 1969-1974 (37th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $17.2 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesGerald Rudolph Ford Jr. Term: 1974-1977 (38th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $8.1 million.Keystone / Getty ImagesJames Earl Carter. Term: 1977-1981 (39th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $8.1 million.Hulton Archive / Getty ImagesRonald Wilson Reagan. Term: 1981-1989 (40th president). Peak net worth (in current dollars): $14.2 million.Michael Evans / The White House / Getty ImagesFILE - In this June 5, 1989 file photo, U.S. President George H.W. Bush holds a news conference at the White House in Washington where he condemned the Chinese crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators in Beijing's Tiananmen Square. Bush died at the age of 94 on Friday, Nov. 30, 2018, about eight months after the death of his wife, Barbara Bush. (AP Photo/Marcy Nighswander, File) ORG XMIT: NYAG301Marcy Nighswander, APFILE - In this Jan. 19, 1999, file photo, President Bill Clinton gestures while giving his State of the Union address on Capitol Hill in Washington. President Donald Trump will deliver his State of the Union address at one of the most contentious times in his stewardship of the nation, but others may have had it worse: Abraham Lincoln had the Civil War, Richard Nixon was caught up in Watergate and Clinton was impeached. (AP Photo/J.Scott Applewhite, File) ORG XMIT: WX202J. Scott Applewhite, APWASHINGTON - JANUARY 28: U.S. President George W. Bush delivers his State of the Union address at the U.S. Capitol January 28, 2008 in Washington, DC. Bush, in his last address, spoke on such topics as the uncertainty of the economy, improving education, the status of the war in Iraq, and immigration reform. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images) ORG XMIT: 78870941 GTY ID: 70941WM016_BUSH_GIVES_HIMark Wilson, Getty ImagesFormer President Barack Obama accepts the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Ripple of Hope Award at a ceremony, Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2018, in New York. (AP Photo/Jason DeCrow) ORG XMIT: NYJD109Jason DeCrow, APIn this Feb. 7, 2019 photo, President Donald Trump speaks during the National Prayer Breakfast, in Washington. Trump is trying to turn the debate over a wall at the U.S.-Mexico border back to his political advantage as his signature pledge to American voters threatens to become a model of unfulfilled promises. Trump will hold his first campaign rally since Novembers midterm elections in El Paso, Texas, on Monday. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci) ORG XMIT: WX302Evan Vucci, APFeatured Weekly Ad