Barron Trump turns 20. How tall is the president's youngest son? – Cincinnati Enquirer
March 20 is Barron Trump‘s birthday.
The president’s son has gone viral several times since his father first took office in 2016, especially for his towering height.
While he might be the youngest child of President Donald Trump, he also happens to be the tallest in the family (and no, he’s not 6-7).
So, how tall is Barron Trump? Here’s what we know.
Barron Trump turns 20 on March 20. He was born March 20, 2006.
He is the sole child of the president and First Lady Melania Trump, and he’s a U.S. citizen.
When people Google “Barron Trump’s height,” search results show he is now 6 feet, 9 inches tall. However, during his May 2024 graduation from Oxbridge Academy in West Palm Beach, he was reportedly 6 feet, 7 inches tall.
While most men stop growing after puberty − around the age of 18 − some may continue to grow until their early 20s.
If Google is accurate, the youngest Trump child stands as tall as NBA star LeBron James. But even at 6-foot-7, he remains the tallest of his siblings and rises above his father, who is listed as 6 feet, 3 inches.
His mother, a former model, is 5-foot-11. Among his half-brothers, Eric Trump is 6-5 and Donald Trump Jr. is 6-1.
During Donald Trump’s first term, the youngest son seemed to be as tall, if not taller than, his mother by 2017, when he was only 11. Photos of Barron Trump walking alongside his mother from 2017 and 2018 show the pair almost eye to eye, despite her wearing heels.
By 2018, photos of Barron show him to be as tall, if not taller than, his father.
Barron Trump has four half-siblings: Donald Trump Jr., 48, Ivanka Trump, 44, Eric Trump, 42, and Tiffany Trump, 32.
Barron Trump spent much of his childhood at the Trump Tower in Manhattan, living there until his father was sworn in as the 45th president in early 2017, according to the Palm Beach Post, part of the USA TODAY NETWORK. Barron Trump moved into the White House when he was age 11 and lived there until 2019, when the family permanently relocated to Trump’s private club, Mar-a-Lago, in Palm Beach, Florida.
USA TODAY reporters Natalie Neysa Alund and Saman Shafiq contributed to this report.