On Tuesday, Elon Musk's net worth briefly topped $1.5 trillion. Technically, it ended the day at $1.4 trillion, which was $100 billion more than the previous day and $400 billion more than Friday.
That would have sounded completely insane a decade ago. It would have sounded insane five years ago. Honestly, it would have sounded insane last year. Musk is now the first person in history to break every major wealth threshold from $300 billion through $1 trillion: $300 billion, $400 billion, $500 billion, $600 billion, $700 billion, $800 billion, $900 billion, and finally $1 trillion. Then, on June 16, 2026, he crossed another line no person had ever reached before: a $1.5 trillion net worth.
The history of Elon's fortune is absolutely incredible. His first big windfall came in 1999 when, at the age of 28, he sold his city guide company, Zip2, to Compaq for $307 million. After paying his investors/co-founders (including his brother Kimbal Musk) and taxes, Elon walked away with a liquid net worth of $22 million. That's the same as having a net worth of around $44 million today.
If Elon had simply invested that $22 million in the S&P 500 in 1999, today he would be worth around $100 million. And that assumes he lived off the dividends along the way. If he was able to reinvest the dividends, today, the 54-year-old Elon Musk would be worth $140 million, and his portfolio would be generating around $2 million per year in dividends. That would be an absolutely amazing life for any human on earth.
Obviously, Elon did not follow that path.
In reality, Elon's fortunes went through bubbles, crashes, near-bankruptcy, lawsuits, bailouts, government contracts, stock splits, Twitter chaos, Tesla mania, and finally the biggest IPO in history.
Below, we walk you through the complete history of Elon Musk's net worth.
(Photo by Jean Catuffe/GC Images)
1999: The Zip2 Payday – $22 Million
Elon Musk's first major fortune came in 1999, when Compaq acquired Zip2 for $307 million. Musk co-founded the online city guide software company with his brother Kimbal Musk in the mid-1990s, and the sale gave Elon a reported personal after-tax payday of around $22 million.
That was real money. Life-changing money. But compared with what came later, it was barely the opening scene.
Musk did enjoy the money for about five seconds. Shortly after the Zip2 sale, he bought a $1 million McLaren F1, one of the fastest and most coveted supercars in the world. In 2000, while driving with future PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel, Musk reportedly tried to show off what the car could do, lost control, hit an embankment, and sent the McLaren flying. The car was completely uninsured.
That anecdote is almost too perfect. A young Elon Musk gets rich, buys one of the rarest cars on earth, launches it into the air, and takes the entire loss on the chin because he did not bother to insure it. In hindsight, it was a preview of the risk tolerance that would define the rest of his financial life.
Musk used part of the Zip2 windfall to launch X.com, an online financial services company that eventually merged with Confinity and became PayPal.
2002: PayPal Sells To eBay – $180 Million
In 2002, eBay acquired PayPal for $1.5 billion in stock. Musk, one of PayPal's largest shareholders, walked away with approximately $180 million after taxes.
That was the moment he had enough money to retire comfortably forever.
Instead, he did the opposite.
Musk famously split almost all of that money across three wildly risky ideas. He put roughly $100 million into SpaceX, roughly $70 million into Tesla, and roughly $10 million into SolarCity. He did not keep a giant safe pile of cash. He did not quietly build a diversified portfolio of index funds, bonds, real estate, and blue-chip stocks. He effectively shoved his entire liquid fortune into rockets, electric cars, and solar power.
That is an insane allocation. It is also the reason he is Elon Musk.
By the end of that decade, this all-in strategy nearly destroyed him.
2004: Tesla Investment – Roughly $200 Million
In 2004, Musk invested $6.5 million in Tesla's Series A round and became the company's chairman. Tesla was not yet the global electric vehicle giant it would become. It was a tiny, fragile startup trying to build expensive electric sports cars at a time when most of the auto industry considered EVs a niche curiosity.
On paper, Musk was still worth around $200 million. But much of that wealth was tied up in illiquid, high-risk startups.
His fortune was already becoming something unusual. He was not a traditional rich person sitting on a pile of cash. He was a man whose net worth depended almost entirely on whether a few extremely unlikely companies could survive long enough to matter.
2008: Near Bankruptcy
By 2008, Musk was in serious financial trouble.
Tesla was running out of money. SpaceX had suffered multiple failed launches. The global financial crisis made raising capital brutal. Musk was also going through a highly publicized divorce from his first wife, Justine. In court disclosures, he admitted that he had run out of cash and was relying on personal loans from wealthy friends to cover living expenses and legal bills.
His paper wealth still existed in theory, but it was locked inside companies that could have collapsed.
The situation at Tesla was especially dire. The company was so close to failing that it needed emergency financing at the end of 2008. Musk has described the period as one where both Tesla and SpaceX were on the brink, and he did not have enough money to save both if things went badly.
Then SpaceX's fourth Falcon 1 launch succeeded. NASA awarded SpaceX a major contract. Tesla secured emergency financing. Musk survived by inches.
That is the part of the story that makes the later numbers so ridiculous. The man who is now worth as much as a major national economy was, less than two decades ago, borrowing money from friends while trying to keep his companies alive.
2010: Tesla IPO – $650 Million
Tesla went public in 2010 at $17 per share. At the end of Tesla's first day as a public company, Musk was worth roughly $650 million.
He was rich, but not yet a billionaire.
Tesla was still seen by many investors as an interesting but extremely speculative car company. The idea that it would one day become a trillion-dollar company was laughable to almost everyone.
SpaceX, meanwhile, was still private. It was valuable, but nowhere near the public-market monster it would later become.
2012: Billionaire Status – $2 Billion
By 2012, Musk's net worth had climbed to around $2 billion. Tesla was gaining credibility, SpaceX was proving it could reach orbit, and Musk was no longer just an eccentric startup founder. He was becoming one of the most important entrepreneurs in the world.
Still, his fortune remained small compared with the biggest tech billionaires of the era. Bill Gates, Larry Ellison, Warren Buffett, Jeff Bezos, and Mark Zuckerberg were in a totally different league.
That would change quickly.
2018: "Funding Secured" Era – $20 Billion
By 2018, Musk was worth around $20 billion. Tesla had become a major public company, but it was also under intense pressure. The Model 3 production ramp nearly broke the company, Musk was sleeping at the factory, and his infamous "funding secured" tweet triggered legal and regulatory fallout.
That same year, Tesla's board approved one of the most audacious executive compensation packages in corporate history. At the time, Tesla's market cap was roughly $55 billion. To unlock the full package, Musk had to grow the company to levels that many Wall Street analysts considered absurd, including a top market cap target of $650 billion.
Critics mocked it as unrealistic. Some saw it as a publicity stunt. Others viewed it as a corporate governance problem.
In hindsight, it became one of the wildest pay packages ever created. Tesla did not merely hit those targets. It blew through them. The package would later be challenged in court, stripped away, and then reinstated, turning it into one of the strangest and most consequential executive compensation battles of all time.
Even then, $20 billion seemed enormous.
In hindsight, it was still early.
January 2020: The Pandemic Launchpad – $28 Billion
At the start of 2020, Musk was worth around $28 billion.
Then Tesla stock went vertical. As the world entered the pandemic, investors began treating Tesla not merely as a car company, but as a technology, battery, software, energy, and autonomy company. Tesla's market cap exploded, and Musk's fortune exploded with it.
November 2020: Passes Bill Gates – $128 Billion
By November 2020, Musk was worth around $128 billion, making him the second-richest person in the world behind Jeff Bezos.
Passing Bill Gates was a symbolic moment. Gates had been the face of extreme tech wealth for decades. Musk had now blown past him on the strength of Tesla stock.
January 2021: Richest Person On Earth – $195 Billion
In January 2021, Musk passed Jeff Bezos to become the richest person in the world for the first time. His net worth was around $195 billion. Just one year earlier, he had been worth $28 billion. That is a roughly $167 billion gain in about 12 months.
November 2021: Tesla Peak – $335 Billion
In November 2021, Tesla's market cap reached roughly $1.2 trillion, and Musk's net worth climbed to around $335 billion. At the time, it was the largest modern fortune ever recorded. Musk was not just the richest person alive. He had passed the inflation-adjusted fortunes of many of history's legendary industrialists. Then came the crash.
2022–2023: Twitter, Tesla Crash, And The Largest Wealth Loss Ever
By late 2022, Musk's fortune had plunged. Tesla stock crashed, and Musk's $44 billion acquisition of Twitter created a fresh wave of chaos, distractions, debt concerns, and investor anxiety.
By December 2022, his net worth had fallen to around $134 billion.
In January 2023, Musk set a record for suffering the largest personal fortune loss ever recorded. His net worth was around $137 billion, down nearly $200 billion from the 2021 peak.
By June 2023, Musk had recovered enough to reclaim the title of world's richest person from Bernard Arnault, with a net worth of around $192 billion.
Late 2024: The Comeback – $348 Billion To $400 Billion
After the 2024 election, Musk's fortune surged again as Tesla and SpaceX valuations climbed. By November 2024, his net worth had risen to around $348 billion.
In December 2024, a SpaceX tender offer valued the company at around $350 billion, pushing Musk's fortune to roughly $400 billion.
He was once again the richest person on Earth by a massive margin.
2025: $500 Billion, Then $700 Billion
In October 2025, Musk became the first person in history to reach a $500 billion net worth.
Just two months later, in December 2025, the reinstatement of his Tesla pay package helped push his fortune to around $700 billion.
At this point, the trillionaire conversation no longer felt like science fiction. It felt like math.
February 2026: SpaceX-xAI Merger – $750 Billion
In February 2026, SpaceX combined with Musk's artificial intelligence company xAI in a transaction that dramatically increased the implied value of Musk's private-company holdings.
CelebrityNetWorth estimated his net worth at around $750 billion after the merger.
At that level, Musk was already far richer than any other living person and richer than nearly every historical figure after adjusting for inflation.
Then SpaceX went public.
June 2026: The First Trillionaire – $1.02 Trillion
In June 2026, SpaceX priced the largest IPO in history. The company sold 555.6 million shares at $135 apiece, raising $75 billion and valuing SpaceX at $1.77 trillion.
Using CelebrityNetWorth's estimate that Musk owns roughly 43% of SpaceX, his SpaceX stake at the IPO price was worth about $761 billion. Add roughly $260 billion in non-SpaceX assets, primarily Tesla and other holdings, and Musk's total net worth reached approximately $1.02 trillion.
Elon Musk had become the world's first trillionaire.
June 2026: SpaceX Surges – $1.35 Trillion, Then $1.5 Trillion
After its IPO, SpaceX shares began trading publicly under the ticker "SPCX." The stock closed its first day at $160. It then surged again, closing at $192 and giving SpaceX a market cap of roughly $2.52 trillion.
At that level, Musk's net worth reached around $1.35 trillion.
Then SpaceX kept climbing. With the company trading around a $2.8 trillion market cap, Musk's roughly 43% stake is worth about $1.2 trillion by itself. Add his estimated $260 billion in non-SpaceX assets, and his net worth is now approximately: $1.5 trillion.
Elon Musk: Net Worth Milestones
| Date & Milestone | Net Worth |
|---|---|
| June 2026 SpaceX Rockets to $2.8T Market Cap | $1.5 Trillion |
| June 2026 Two Days After SpaceX IPO Surge | $1.35 Trillion |
| June 2026 SpaceX Prices Largest IPO in History | $1.02 Trillion |
| Feb 2026 SpaceX-xAI Merger | $750 Billion |
| Dec 2025 Tesla Pay Package Reinstatement | $700 Billion |
| Oct 2025 First Person in History to Reach $500B | $500 Billion |
| Dec 2024 SpaceX Hits $350B Valuation | $400 Billion |
| Nov 2024 Post-Election Market Rally | $348 Billion |
| June 2023 Reclaims #1 Spot from Bernard Arnault | $192 Billion |
| Jan 2023 Largest Personal Fortune Loss Ever | $137 Billion |
| Dec 2022 Tesla Stock Crash & Twitter Buyout | $134 Billion |
| Nov 2021 Initial Tesla Peak | $335 Billion |
| Jan 2021 Becomes Richest Person on Earth | $195 Billion |
| Nov 2020 Surpasses Bill Gates for #2 Spot | $128 Billion |
| Aug 2020 Surpasses Mark Zuckerberg for #3 | $115 Billion |
| Jan 2020 Start of the Meteoric Pandemic Rise | $28 Billion |
| 2018 "Funding Secured" Tweet Era | $20 Billion |
| 2012 Debuts on Billionaires List | $2 Billion |
| 2010 Tesla IPO | $650 Million |
| 2008 Tesla & SpaceX Near Bankruptcy | ~$0 Cash / Paper Wealth At Risk |
| 2004 Invests in Tesla Series A | ~$200 Million |
| 2002 PayPal Acquisition by eBay | $180 Million |
| 1999 Zip2 Sale to Compaq | $22 Million |
The Most Extreme Wealth Explosion In History
The path was not smooth. He bought a million-dollar supercar and crashed it uninsured. He plowed the PayPal fortune into SpaceX, Tesla, and SolarCity instead of preserving it. He nearly went broke in 2008. He suffered the largest personal wealth collapse ever recorded in 2022 and 2023. Tesla's stock has repeatedly swung wildly. SpaceX spent years as a private company whose valuation was enormous but still theoretical.
But by June 2026, the theory became public-market reality.
He did not just break the trillion-dollar ceiling. He shattered it, then added hundreds of billions of dollars more to his name in a matter of days. On June 16, 2026, after SpaceX's market cap climbed to roughly $2.8 trillion, Elon Musk became the first person in history to reach a $1.5 trillion net worth.
In 1999, Elon Musk became a millionaire.
In 2012, he became a billionaire.
In 2026, he became a trillionaire.
And if SpaceX keeps climbing, the next milestones may be even more absurd.
Read more: A Complete Timeline Of Elon Musk's Net Worth: From $22 Million In 1999 To $1.5 Trillion Today

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