Fact Check

Did Trump say his ear started 'regrowing' the day after he was shot?

The U.S. president was the target of an assassination attempt in July 2024 during his election campaign.

by Nur Ibrahim, Published Jan. 5, 2026


Image courtesy of Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images


Claim:
On July 19, 2024, an authentic post on X by Donald Trump stated: "[The bullet] took my entire ear off. The whole ear. But I went to the doctor, and he said, and this is true, he said, you heal faster than anyone I’ve ever seen. Nobody is healthier than you. And the next day, my ear was growing back, and the doctor said, nobody regrows ears like that [...]"
Rating:
Fake

About this rating


In early 2026, an old screenshot resurfaced, claiming to show a U.S. President Donald Trump post about his recovery on Truth Social after being shot in a July 13, 2024, assassination attempt during his reelection campaign. According to the screenshot in the posts — which originally spread in July 2024 — Trump wrote on X that his ear was entirely taken off by a bullet, but it began regrowing the next day. 

Screenshots of the purported post spread across social media in 2024 and 2026. It stated:

It took my entire ear off. The whole ear. But I went to the doctor, and he said, and this is true, he said, you heal faster than anyone I've ever seen. Nobody is healthier than you. And the next day, my ear was growing back, and the doctor said, nobody regrows ears like that, and its a really remarkable thing, regrowing an ear like that, most people can't do it. And I know that, because its not me saying this, it's the doctor, its everybody saying, just, you're the best at regrowing ears.

(X user @AgentSelf99B)

The above post was not real. We found no evidence of it on any of Trump's social media accounts, including on his X account — which he last posted on in August 2023. As such, we rate the above screenshot claiming Trump regrew his ear as fake.

Furthermore, Trump's campaign released a medical letter detailing what exactly happened to the former president's ear as the bullet narrowly missed him. 

The letter — signed by U.S. Rep. Ronny Jackson, who served as Trump's White House physician — stated that Trump sustained a gunshot wound to the right ear that came "less than a quarter of an inch from entering his head, and struck the top of his right ear." The bullet track "produced a 2 cm wide wound that extended down to the cartilaginous surface of the ear. There was initially significant bleeding, followed by marked swelling of the entire upper ear."

After the assassination attempt, Trump appeared at the Republican National Convention with a white bandage covering the upper section of his right ear. The bandage did not cover the whole ear, indicating that the ear was not taken off by a bullet.


By Nur Ibrahim

Nur Nasreen Ibrahim is a reporter with experience working in television, international news coverage, fact checking, and creative writing.


Source code