No, there is no reliable evidence that Donald Trump actually said “it burns when I pee” in a real speech or official setting, including at the United Nations.

What’s really going on

Several viral posts and memes in late 2025 claimed that Trump told the UN “it burns when I pee” (or similar phrases) during a speech, often using fake news- style graphics or edited screenshots. These were created as satire or humor but were then shared around social media as if they were genuine quotes.

Fact-checkers and news outlets reviewed the claim and concluded it was false: Trump did not make that statement in his UN remarks. The quote is part of the broader trend of parody or fabricated “bathroom humor” lines being attached to political figures and then circulating without context.

Why people think he said it

  • Edited images and joke “breaking news” graphics made it look like a real broadcast or headline.
  • Posts on forums and social platforms repeated the phrase as if it had actually happened, which helped the rumor snowball.
  • Many users saw the meme out of context and assumed it was a genuine quote rather than satire.

How to treat this rumor

If you see a screenshot or clip claiming Trump said “it burns when I pee,” it should be treated as a joke, meme, or fabrication, not a factual record of his speech. For real quotes, it’s safer to rely on full speech videos or transcripts from reputable outlets instead of isolated memes.

TL;DR: Trump did not say “it burns when I pee” in any verified speech; it’s a viral meme and satire, not a real quote.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.