For voters tired of the status quo, Donald Trump’s gaudy lifestyle was part of his populist appeal, suggesting both his inability to be bought and his enmity toward his better-heeled peers. And in his first two months in office, the president has certainly delivered on at least one of those two fronts, refusing to compromise any of his creature comforts. He has traveled to Mar-a-Lago, the Trump-owned Palm Beach club he has dubbed the “Southern White House,” most weekends since he took office, and visited other Trump-owned properties on the rare weekends he has stayed in Washington. First Lady Melania Trump has yet to move into the White House, opting to stay in Trump Tower in Manhattan until their son, Barron, finishes his school year. His two adult sons, who took over day-to-day operations of the Trump Organization while the boss is in the Oval Office, are traveling around the world to open new hotels. Ivanka Trump, meanwhile, has taken an office in the West Wing and is in the process of obtaining a security clearance to serve as an unofficial adviser to her father. Three of his adult children, along with his eight grandchildren and their spouses, traveled to Aspen earlier this week during what is spring break for private schools along the Acela corridor.

As the Trumps know better than anyone, there’s no such thing as a free trip to Mar-a-Lago, or to Aspen, and all this shuttling to-and-fro with Secret Service protection adds up. Based on internal agency documents, The Washington Post reports, the Secret Service has had to request $60 million in additional funding for next year in order to keep up with the Trump lifestyle. The Secret Service declined to share with the Post how much it spent to protect previous First Families.

Nearly half of the new figure—$26.8 million—would go to protecting the First Family and the gilded Trump Tower triplex where Melania has opted to stay for the time being. The money will go toward “residence security operations at the president’s private residence in Trump Tower,” with roughly $12.5 million earmarked to cover “personnel related costs in New York,” as well as additional undisclosed costs, already spent this year, to put in “equipment and infrastructure to secure Trump Tower,” the fiscal 2018 budget documents show.

The ask also included more money to protect the unusually large First Family. President Trump is 70 years old—the oldest president to be sworn in for a first term. He has five children, two of whom have eight children between them. Eric Trump announced earlier this week that he and his wife, Lara, are having a baby boy in September, bringing the total count of Trumps to 19. The Secret Service asked for six additional full-time-equivalent positions for the Trump detail, the Post reports.

The remainder of the proposed budget additional funding—$33 million—would go toward travel costs. It is no secret that the president is fond of taking trips to Mar-a-Lago. The Trump children have also jetted to Dubai, Vancouver, and Aspen since he took office, for both business and pleasure. All of these trips require advance and detail, and thus, come out of the agency budget.

They also require a great deal of money from local police protection. Between Election Day and Inauguration Day, the Post reports that New York police spent about $24 million to secure Trump Tower, and on any given day, the city spends between $127,000 and $145,000 to protect the First Lady and First Son in Manhattan while President Trump is in Washington—which has been most weekdays and a handful of weekends, as well.