Mar-a-Lago: all-new secrets of Trump’s Florida HQ
Unravel the mysteries of the former president's opulent oceanside estate

Donald Trump's magnificent Mar-a-Lago estate hides many secrets, hosting some of the world's most famous and controversial figures over the years. Now it's the new HQ of Trump's post-presidential political career and two tell-all books detail some of the strange workings of this Palm Beach club and private home. From health code violations to enormous bills footed by taxpayers and corruption investigations into its members, let's go through the keyhole and discover the little-known features of Florida's notorious instituition. Click or scroll on for more...
Trump's return to Mar-a-Lago

After leaving the White House in January 2021, Donald Trump headed west to Mar-a-Lago. While some held rallies in support of the former President's return to Palm Beach, not everyone was pleased to see him according to CBS Miami. Some affluent neighbors opposed Trump's permanent move to Mar-a-Lago. A letter was sent to the town council in December 2020 requesting that a 1993 agreement prohibiting any club member – including Trump – from staying at the property for more than three weeks a year be duly enforced.
Trump is classed as a 'club employee'

The council's attorney reviewed Trump's residency in February 2021, coming to an agreement that he could stay. At the council meeting, a lawyer for the former president explained that Trump is a club employee, which means that he is within the decades-long agreement that states that no one can live at Mar-a-Lago unless they work there.
Trump doubled the joining fee after winning the election

Trump doubled the joining fee from $100,000 to $200,000 after he became president, prompting CNBC to report allegations that he was seeking to profit from his position. Some reports suggest the fee, which was $50,000 back when the club opened in the 1990s, is now $250,000. Members are also required to stump up yearly membership dues of $14,000 and spend a minimum of $2,000 per annum on food.
Are members leaving Mar-a-Lago?

Since Trump stepped down as president, the mood at the club is rumored to have become decidedly 'sad' and somber. Author Laurence Leamer told MSNBC host Alex Witt that "It's a very dispirited place". Having been acquitted from his impeachment in February 2021, Trump spent summer at his New Jersey golf club to avoid hurricane season at Mar-a-Lago but with the onset of fall Trump will move his political operation back to Florida.
Trump: no longer one of Forbes' 400 richest people in America

For the first time in more than two decades Trump has not made the Forbes 400. With a net worth of $2.5 billion, he missed making the list by roughly $400 million. According to Forbes his net worth is the same as last year, but it’s a significant comedown from the $3.7 billion he was worth in 2016. Forbes’ Dan Alexander said: "If Trump is looking for someone to blame, he can start with himself. Five years ago, he had a golden opportunity to diversify his fortune. Fresh off the 2016 election, federal ethics officials were pushing Trump to divest his real estate assets. That would have allowed him to reinvest the proceeds into broad-based index funds and assume office free of conflicts of interest."
Mar-a-Lago was a draw for ‘Senator Freeloader’

Once one of Trump's most vocal political opponents, Senator Lindsey Graham has become one of the former president's advisors in more recent years. But the South Carolina Republican didn't win over former White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham, who criticized the senator in her forthcoming memoir, I'll Take Your Questions Now. In an excerpt printed in Business Insider she dubbed him one of the 'hangers-on' saying: "It struck me that he was using Trump to mop up the freebies like there was no tomorrow. He would show up at Mar-a-Lago or Bedminster to play free rounds of golf, stuff his face with free food, and hang out with Trump and his celebrity pals."
Mar-a-Lago members had ‘improper influence’ over Trump government

Recently, a joint investigation by the House committees on Oversight and Veterans’ Affairs found that three members of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort improperly influenced decisions at the Department of Veterans Affairs. ProPublica reported that associates from his private club pursued a plan for the Department of Veterans Affairs to monetize patient data, according to documents newly released by congressional investigators. Those accused included Ike Perlmutter, CEO of Marvel Entertainment, attorney Marc Sherman, and Dr Bruce Moskowitz. Oversight Committee chairwoman Rep Carolyn Maloney and Veterans’ Affairs chair Rep Mark Takano alleged that the three men “violated the law and sought to exert improper influence over government officials to further their own personal interests”.
The future of the 'Mar-a-Lago three'?

According to the Independent, emails obtained by the committee between Dr Moskowitz and then-Veteran Affairs Secretary David Shulkin revealed that the group was taking efforts to cover up their activities, a move that would prove problematic after the Government Accountability Office found that the group constituted an official federal advisory committee under law and was therefore subject to records and transparency requirements. The results of the investigation could be the basis for the launch of an investigation at the Justice Department regarding potential breaches of the Federal Advisory Committee Act.
Trump and Melania 'are treated like zoo animals'

Other reports from Palm Beach also shine an unexpected light on Donald and Melania's curious dinner customs at the estate. Author Michael Wolff claims that the couple are "treated like zoo animals" because they eat alone at a roped-off table in the Mar-a-Lago club, under the watchful gaze of 50 or 60 tables of diners. Wolff also says that guests "rise from their seats to applaud the arrival of the former first couple to the dining area" each evening.
Explosive exposé

The revelations emerged in an excerpt of Michael Wolff's new book, Landslide: The Final Days of the Trump Presidency, which was released in July 2021. The political writer's third exposé on the former president, Wolff also claims that Donald Trump had been asking visitors at his Mar-a-Lago resort for recommendations for lawyers, in the wake of recent charges brought against the Trump Organization for tax crimes.
Trump charges taxpayers for his security detail

Since returning to his Palm Beach estate, Trump has been the subject of much controversy, and his spending in particular has made headlines this year. According to reports from The Guardian, Trump has billed the Secret Service more than $40,000 of taxpayers' money for accommodation for his own security team detail. Former presidents are provided with Secret Service protection for life, but not one to play by the books, there are no other examples of past presidents billing the Secret Service such a large amount.
The bill to stay at Mar-a-Lago

When he left the White House to live at Mar-a-Lago on 20 January, public records show that Trump charged the Secret Service $396.15 every night until 30 April. The charges are rumored to be for a single room at the resort that was used as a workspace for the Secret Service, which has been reduced from four or five rooms when he was president. However, costs for the single room have sky-rocketed, as Trump has spent much more time in Florida, rather than previously just visiting at weekends.
Trump's presidential visits cost US taxpayers millions

Trump visited the property 32 times during his presidency, spending a total of 142 days there. Mar-a-Lago was used for important government business and hosted meetings with world leaders, including China's Xi Jinping and Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe. But these trips didn't come cheap with four sojourns costing a whopping $13.6 million or an average of $3.4 million each.
Trump lost the only helipad in Palm Beach

It's not only his security that has had to be downsized since his exit as president. A helipad, which was installed for the president on the lawn of Mar-a-Lago was removed when he lost the title of president. The helipad was the only one of its kind in Palm Beach, where there is a strict 'no helicopter' rule for its residents, granted as a special privilege to Trump during his term in the White House.
Not all club members are Republicans

The number of members is estimated at almost 500 and, contrary to what you might think, the list isn't completely dominated by MAGA Republicans. They do make up a significant proportion, though, including several who were nominated by Trump for ambassador posts. The most notable left-leaning member, Democratic Party power broker George Norcross, recently gave up his membership.
A ghost is said to roam the corridors

In an interview promoting his book Palm Beach, Mar-a-Lago and the Rise of America's Xanadu, writer Les Standiford mentioned that some people insist the ghost of Marjorie Merriweather-Post roams Mar-a-Lago's corridors. What Post would have thought of Trump is anyone's guess and although her daughter wasn't a fan, the scion's granddaughter Marjorie Post Dye praised him for preserving the property.
The club has broken health codes

An Associated Press investigation conducted in 2017 found that Mar-a-Lago had been cited for 78 health code violations in the previous three years, with inspectors flagging up a range of issues that included chefs failing to wash their hands, dirty cutting boards, mold growing on the ice machine, as well as serving unsafe seafood and meat that had been improperly refrigerated.
Melania Trump revamped the owner's suite

Pictured here from the outside, the owner's suite contains the aforementioned Versailles Master Bedroom, an additional bedroom, the Pine Hall and the Louis XV hall, living rooms, bathrooms and offices. As well as searching for a school for Barron Trump and setting up an office at Mar-a-Lago to continue her 'Be Best' campaign, Melania Trump prepared for the family's move by overseeing the suite's expansion and revamp, opting for copious dark wood and white marble.
Trump allegedly hated the makeover

Working with her favorite interior designer, Tham Kannalikham, Melania updated some of the private quarters in her own modern aesthetic. According to a report by CNN, Donald Trump is said to have hit the roof when he saw the makeover. He reportedly ordered the immediate removal of the wood and marble. Here's how the master bedroom looked in the 1990s.
Mar-a-Lago was nearly demolished

Plus, the property's location directly under a flight path created a security nightmare. President Carter finally made the decision to get rid of Mar-a-Lago and handed the vacant presidential estate back to the Post Foundation in 1981, though it took an Act of Congress to make it happen. The property was put on the market for $20 million – though some sources say $25 million – but potential buyers were not to be found and permission was sought to raze it to the ground.
Trump found Mar-a-Lago through a cab driver

According to the City Journal, Trump is said to have first heard about Mar-a-Lago from a taxi cab driver during a drive around Palm Beach, and knew there and then that he just had to have it. To the flashy real estate mogul, Post's winter retreat represented the ultimate trophy property. Trump initially offered the Post family $15 million for the estate.
Trump played hardball to make the deal

The offer was rejected, so Trump decided to play tough. He purchased a beachfront parcel of land between the estate and ocean for $2 million. According to The Independent, he revealed plans to put a building up that would block the sea view from Mar-a-Lago, thus depreciating its value and putting off rival buyers.
Trump got the estate for a bargain

Trump's audacious move had the desired effect. In 1985, the Post family agreed to accept just $8 million for the estate and all its contents. This is a fraction of what Mar-a-Lago cost to build in real terms and what it's estimated to be worth nowadays – Forbes valued the property at $160 million in 2018. The property magnate had landed the real estate bargain of the year, if not the decade.
Trump claimed a restoration tax break

When the Trump empire ran into financial difficulties in the early 1990s, Donald Trump worked out a way of turning his money-pit estate into a money-making juggernaut – by transforming it into a member's club. To win over the Palm Beach town council and gain permission for his venture, Trump promised to carry out a sensitive restoration of Mar-a-Lago, according to the Palm Beach Post. This would also allow him to claim a massive tax break in the form of a conservation easement.
The club has an inclusive membership policy

Trump billed the club as open to all who could afford to sign up, unlike the two most established private members' clubs in Palm Beach, which, shockingly, barred African American, Jewish and LGBTQ+ people from joining. While Trump has been rightly applauded for this inclusive policy, some commentators say his motives were more about making as much money as possible and further ingratiating himself with the town council than anything benevolent. The town eventually granted permission for the club, though with some strings attached, which we will come to later.
Trump spent $7 million on a gold ballroom

Trump shelled out millions on the expensive restoration, which was given a big thumbs up by conservationists, and splurged on a number of additions to the property, including two swimming pools, a beauty salon and a spa, with the lion's share of the money going on a new 20,000-square-foot ballroom in the Louis XIV style. Trump is said to have spent $7 million gilding the palatial space and $100,000 a-piece on the gold basins in the bathrooms.
The Baby House was Ivanka's childhood bedroom

Interestingly, Post had iron bars installed on the windows and placed guards at the door of the Baby House following the Lindbergh kidnapping of 1932 and wouldn't allow her daughter to go anywhere without bodyguards in tow, up until her 18th birthday. In later years, guests including 'Lady Bird' Johnson stayed in the suite, and when Trump acquired the property, his daughter Ivanka got dibs on it, though these days she prefers staying in the Banyan Bungalow on the grounds.
Trump sold some of the antiques

Although the mega-mansion itself, which had gone from 118 to 126 rooms, was restored, some of its contents were sold off at auction and replaced with reproductions. Among the items that Trump offloaded were the jewel-encrusted marble dining table, antique Spanish rug, Louis XIV chests and Venetian glasses worth a thousand dollars each.
Michael Jackson and Lisa Marie Presley honeymooned at the club

The club has welcomed a long list of celebrities over the years, including Michael Jackson and Lisa Marie Presley, who spent their honeymoon at Mar-a-Lago. Other stars who visited the club whether for pleasure or to perform at a function include Oprah Winfrey, Martha Stewart, Tiger Woods, Billy Joel, Vanessa Williams, Liza Minnelli and Sylvester Stallone.
Celine Dion took on the chef

Laurence Leamer, author of Mar-a-Lago: Inside the Gates of Power at Donald Trump's Presidential Palace, recounts a story in his definitive book on the estate. In 2000, Trump hired top French chef Bernard Goupy, who wowed Celine Dion when she threw a baby shower at the club. Trump wasn't quite so impressed and fired Goupy not long after, having launched an expletive-packed tirade against his signature dish, a Caesar salad. The chef went on to work for Dion who renamed the dish 'Trump Salad'.
What next for Mar-a-Lago?

Fit for a king, never mind an ex-president, Donald Trump's life at Mar-a-Lago continues to intrigue his fans and detractors alike. We're sure there are more secrets to come from within the walls of Palm Beach's most famous and fascinating home...
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