Royalties and an advanced payment for Clinton`s memoir "Hard Choices" also brought in more than $5 million, according to the form.
Clinton filed the public financial disclosure report with the Federal Election Commission on Friday, as was required for any candidate who declared their presidential bid before April 15 and did not seek an extension.
Both Bill and Hillary Clinton`s paid speeches are detailed in the report. Hillary Clinton spent much of 2014 touring the country on the paid speaking circuit. Almost all of her speeches are domestic, expect for a few in Canada and Mexico.
Her highest grossing speech was at a $335,000 appearance at Qualcomm Incorporated in San Diego in October 2014, according to the form. In total, the former secretary of state delivered 51 paid speeches.
Bill Clinton`s speeches are far more international, however. He was paid for a Bank of America speech in London, a food forum appearance in Sweden and a speech to a group of lawyers in The Netherlands.
The former president was even paid $175,000 for a speech in Miami where he appeared via satellite.
The forms also detail the Clintons` investments. The couple has between $5 million and $25 million invested in a JP Morgan Chase cash account, and also have between $5 million and $25 million invested in a Vanguard 500 index fund, a fund that the aide said was tied to the Standard & Poor`s Index and had been opened in the last few months.
The campaign aide said that neither of the returns from the funds would be taxed as capital gains and that the couple paid no capital gains tax during the filing period.
The aide added that the Clintons` estimated tax rate for 2014 was over 30%, a number that would be in her tax filings that the campaign plans to release.
The Clinton`s finances have been a political issue since Clinton left the State Department in 2013. Republicans regularly knocked Clinton`s paid speeches, arguing that she was out of touch for picking up around $300,000 for her appearances.
Compounding the issue was that Clinton told ABC News last year that she and her husband were "dead broke" when they left the White House, a statement that belied the massive earning power they had and the fact that they were dead broke no longer.
And earlier this month, Bill Clinton told NBC News that he would continue giving paid speeches during his wife`s presidential run because he has "got to pay our bills." The comment was widely panned.
Republicans quickly jumped on news of Clinton`s financial disclosure.
"The Clintons` claim that staggering amounts of income from paid speaking fees that raise ethical questions and potential conflicts of interest is simply to `pay our bills` shows how out-of-touch they`ve truly become," said Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus in a statement to reporters.
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