The prohibition against officers receiving a present or emolument is essentially an antibribery rule to prevent influence by a foreign power. At the Virginia Ratifying Convention,
Edmund Randolph, a delegate to the Constitutional Convention, identified the Clause as a key "provision against the danger ... of the president receiving emoluments from foreign powers." The
Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel has opined that The word "emolument" has a broad meaning. At the time of the Founding, it meant "profit", "benefit", or "advantage" of any kind. Because of the "sweeping and unqualified" nature of the constitutional prohibition, and in light of the more sophisticated understanding of conflicts of interest that developed after the
Richard Nixon presidency, most modern presidents have chosen to eliminate any risk of
conflict of interest that may arise by choosing to vest their assets into a
blind trust. receives money from a partnership or similar entity in which he has a stake, and the amount he receives is "a function of the amount paid to the [entity] by the foreign government." This is because such a setup would allow the entity to "in effect be a conduit for that government", and so the government official would be exposed to possible "undue influence and corruption by [the] foreign government."
Presidential Traditional treatment Foreign states often present the President of the United States with gifts. While President,
George Washington received a painting of, and key to, the
Bastille from the
Marquis de Lafayette, as "a tribute Which I owe as A Son to My Adoptive father." After leaving office, Washington also took home to
Mount Vernon a painting of
Louis XIV that he had received as a gift from a French diplomat who had been his aide during the American war of independence. However, nothing is known about Washington's motivations, or whether he considered the emoluments clause to apply to either gift. Post-Washington Presidents have traditionally sought permission from Congress to keep gifts. Absent permission, the President will deposit the object with the Department of State. For example,
Andrew Jackson sought permission from Congress to keep a gold medal presented by
Simón Bolívar; Congress refused to grant consent, and so Jackson deposited the medal with the Department of State.
Martin Van Buren and
John Tyler received gifts from the
Imam of Muscat, for which they received congressional authorization either to transfer them to the
United States Government or to auction them with proceeds vesting to the
United States Treasury. After China provisionally granted 38 "Trump" trademarks in March 2017, Democratic senators protested Trump's acceptance of the trademarks without congressional approval. In December 2018, there were reports of
Saudi Arabia indirectly funneling funds to Donald Trump through
Trump businesses, such as his hotels, that may be in breach of the Emoluments Clause. The group
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, including former White House lawyers
Norm Eisen and
Richard Painter, filed a lawsuit against Trump alleging violations of the clause, One of these lawsuits,
Blumenthal v. Trump, was dismissed on
standing grounds by the
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Two other lawsuits,
CREW v. Trump and
D.C. and Maryland v. Trump, were dismissed as
moot on January 25, 2021, by the
Supreme Court vacating lower court decisions that went against Trump, because he was no longer in office. The court's decision effectively ended all litigation against Trump on the emoluments issue. In January 2024, Democratic members of the
U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Accountability released their
White House for Sale: How Princes, Prime Ministers, and Premiers Paid Off President Trump report detailing over $7.8 million in payments from foreign governments to Trump-owned businesses. After Republicans took control of the House in the
2022 midterm elections, the committee stopped requesting financial records from Trump's accounting firm,
Mazars, leading the report to assume that additional payments had occurred. In May 2025, the Trump administration expressed its intention to accept
P4-HBJ, a
Boeing 747-8 jumbo jet requested from the
royal family of Qatar for use as the new
Air Force One. With an estimated value of US$400 million, this would be the most valuable gift ever extended to the United States from a foreign government. Although the gift will first be transferred to the
Department of Defense and subsequently to the
Trump presidential library foundation, it still could be in violation of the Emoluments Clause. On May 12, an extensive media report about controversy arising over the gift made note that conservative political blogger and radio host
Erick Erickson criticized the plan by Trump to accept the Qatar airplane and that he provided "widely held criticisms of the gift" by other conservatives to his followers. On May 28th the
Washington Post reported that no deal had been agreed because Qatar required a memorandum of understanding confirming that any transfer make it clear that the request had been initiated by the United States in order to ensure that Qatar had no legal liability. On July 7, 2025,
Pete Hegseth signed the memorandum of understanding.
Retired military Under interpretations of the Emoluments Clause elaborated by the
Comptroller General of the United States and the
U.S. Department of Justice Office of Legal Counsel (but which have never been tested in court) retired military personnel are forbidden from receiving employment, consulting fees, gifts, travel expenses, honoraria, or salary from foreign governments without prior consent from Congress. Per section 908 of
title 37 of the United States Code, this requires advance approval from the Secretary of State and the Secretary of the relevant branch of the Armed Services. Retired military officers have voiced concerns through the Retired Officers Association that applying the clause to themselves but not to retired civil service members is not an equal application of the clause, and therefore unconstitutional. In 1942, Congress authorized members of the armed forces to accept any "decorations, orders, medals and emblems" offered by
allied nations during the course of
World War II or up to one year following its conclusion. Notably, Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower accepted a number of titles and awards pursuant to this authorization after the fall of
Nazi Germany, including a knighthood in
Denmark's highest order of chivalry, the
Order of the Elephant. Congress has also consented in advance to the receipt from foreign governments by officials of the United States government (including military personnel) of a variety of gifts, subject to a variety of conditions, in the Foreign Gifts and Decorations Act and section 108A of the Mutual Educational and Cultural Exchange Act, otherwise known as the
Fulbright–Hays Act of 1961. Under these rules numerous foreign decorations have been awarded to American military and civilian personnel, such as for diplomatic service or during the
Vietnam and
Gulf Wars. Presidents
Obama and Trump both received the
Collar of the Order of Abdulaziz Al Saud from
Saudi Arabia, a decoration frequently given to heads of state.
The New York Times has reported that, according to two defense officials, the Army is investigating whether
Michael T. Flynn "received money from the Russian government during a trip he took to Moscow in 2015" while he was a government official. According to the officials, there was no record that Flynn has "filed the required paperwork for the trip", as required by the Emoluments Clause. ==Titles of nobility==