He started with $22 million and a wrecked supercar. Today, he’s worth $1.5 trillion.
Elon Musk didn’t just become the richest person on Earth — he rewrote the rulebook on what wealth can even look like. His financial story isn’t a straight line of smart investments and careful planning. It’s a wild rollercoaster of rocket explosions, near-bankruptcy, Twitter chaos, and a stock market that turned him into something the world had never seen before: a trillionaire.
Let’s walk through the entire journey, from his very first payday to the moment history was made.
1999: The First Big Check — $22 Million from Zip2
Elon Musk’s money story begins in 1999. He was just 28 years old when tech giant Compaq bought his company Zip2 for $307 million. Zip2 was an online city guide platform that Musk had co-founded with his brother Kimbal in the mid-1990s.
After paying taxes and splitting money with co-founders, Musk personally walked away with around $22 million — roughly $44 million in today’s dollars.
That’s life-changing money for almost anyone. But Musk didn’t sit on it.
He almost immediately spent $1 million on a McLaren F1 supercar — one of the rarest, fastest cars ever made. Shortly after buying it, he tried to show off the car’s speed to a friend, lost control, and launched the car into the air. The McLaren was completely totaled. And it wasn’t insured.
That one moment tells you everything about how Elon Musk handles risk.
He used the rest of the Zip2 money to start a new company called X.com, an online payments startup that would eventually evolve into something massive.
2002: PayPal Gets Sold — $180 Million in the Bank
X.com merged with another company called Confinity and became PayPal. In 2002, eBay snapped up PayPal for $1.5 billion in stock. As one of PayPal’s biggest shareholders, Musk pocketed roughly $180 million after taxes.
At this point, most people would retire. Buy a mansion. Maybe a yacht. Invest quietly and enjoy life.
Musk did none of that.
Instead, he split almost everything he had across three extremely risky bets:
- ~$100 million into SpaceX — a private rocket company
- ~$70 million into Tesla — a tiny electric car startup
- ~$10 million into SolarCity — a solar energy company
He kept almost no cash cushion. No safe index funds. No diversified portfolio. He went all in on ideas most people thought were crazy.
2004: Musk Joins Tesla — Net Worth Around $200 Million
In 2004, Musk invested $6.5 million in Tesla’s Series A funding round and became the company’s chairman. At the time, Tesla was a fragile little startup trying to build expensive electric sports cars in an industry that didn’t take electric vehicles seriously.
His overall fortune was sitting around $200 million on paper, but most of it was locked up in high-risk, illiquid private companies. He wasn’t the kind of rich where you have cash sitting in a bank. He was the kind of rich where everything depends on whether your long-shot bets survive.
2008: The Year Everything Almost Fell Apart
This is the part of the story people forget.
By 2008, Musk was genuinely on the edge of losing it all. Tesla was burning through cash. SpaceX had suffered three failed rocket launches in a row. A global financial crisis made it nearly impossible to raise new money. And on top of all that, Musk was going through a painful and expensive divorce.
He later admitted he had run out of personal cash and was borrowing money from wealthy friends just to cover his basic living expenses and legal bills.
Tesla was so close to dying that it needed emergency financing at the end of 2008 just to survive. Musk said that at one point, he didn’t have enough money to save both SpaceX and Tesla if either needed a rescue.
Then something extraordinary happened: SpaceX’s fourth Falcon 1 rocket launch succeeded. NASA awarded SpaceX a major contract. Tesla secured emergency financing. Musk survived — but barely.
The man who would one day be worth over a trillion dollars was, in 2008, borrowing money from friends just to stay afloat.
2010: Tesla Goes Public — $650 Million
Tesla’s IPO in 2010 at $17 per share gave Musk a net worth of roughly $650 million by the end of the first trading day.
He was rich. But not yet a billionaire. And Tesla was still seen by most investors as an interesting but very speculative bet in the auto world.
2012: Officially a Billionaire — $2 Billion
By 2012, Musk had crossed into billionaire territory, with a net worth of around $2 billion. Tesla was gaining real credibility, SpaceX was proving it could reach orbit, and the world was starting to take Musk seriously as one of the most important entrepreneurs alive.
Still, compared to the tech titans of the time — Gates, Bezos, Buffett, Zuckerberg — he was in a different league. A much smaller one.
That was about to change.
2018: $20 Billion and a Very Famous Tweet
By 2018, Musk’s net worth had grown to around $20 billion. Tesla had become a major public company, but it was under enormous pressure. The Model 3 production ramp nearly broke the company, and Musk famously slept on the factory floor trying to fix it.
That same year, he fired off the now-infamous “funding secured” tweet, suggesting Tesla might go private at $420 per share. The tweet triggered a securities investigation and regulatory fallout that followed him for years.
Tesla’s board also approved what many considered an absurd executive compensation package — one that required Tesla’s market cap to eventually hit $650 billion for Musk to collect. Wall Street laughed. Critics called it a stunt.
They stopped laughing later.
January 2020: The Pandemic Changes Everything — $28 Billion
At the start of 2020, Musk’s fortune sat at roughly $28 billion. Then the pandemic hit — and Tesla stock went absolutely vertical.
Investors stopped seeing Tesla as just a car company. They started treating it as a technology, battery, energy, and software company all in one. The stock exploded. And Musk’s wealth exploded right along with it.
November 2020: Passing Bill Gates — $128 Billion
By November 2020, Musk was worth around $128 billion — making him the second-richest person on Earth, just behind Jeff Bezos.
Passing Bill Gates was a symbolic moment. For decades, Gates had been the face of extreme tech wealth. Musk had now blown right past him.
January 2021: The Richest Person Alive — $195 Billion
In January 2021, Musk surpassed Jeff Bezos to claim the #1 spot on the global wealth rankings. His net worth had reached approximately $195 billion.
Let that sink in: just 12 months earlier, he was worth $28 billion. He had gained roughly $167 billion in a single year.
November 2021: Peak Tesla — $335 Billion
When Tesla’s market cap hit $1.2 trillion in November 2021, Musk’s personal net worth climbed to a then-record $335 billion. It was the largest modern fortune ever documented. He had surpassed not just living billionaires — but inflation-adjusted historical figures too.
Then came the crash.
2022–2023: The Biggest Wealth Drop in Human History
Things got messy fast.
Tesla’s stock fell sharply. Musk spent $44 billion to buy Twitter, which created chaos — debt concerns, advertiser pullouts, nonstop headlines, and investor anxiety about his focus.
By December 2022, his net worth had plunged to around $134 billion.
In January 2023, Musk officially set the record for the largest personal fortune loss ever recorded — down nearly $200 billion from his 2021 peak.
But he came back.
By June 2023, Musk had recovered enough to reclaim the title of world’s richest person from luxury goods magnate Bernard Arnault, with a net worth of around $192 billion.
Late 2024: The Comeback Begins — $348 Billion to $400 Billion
After the 2024 election, Musk’s fortune surged again. Tesla and SpaceX valuations climbed sharply. By November 2024, his net worth had risen to approximately $348 billion.
In December 2024, a SpaceX tender offer valued the company at around $350 billion, pushing Musk’s total to roughly $400 billion.
He was once again the world’s richest person — by a wide margin.
2025: $500 Billion, Then $700 Billion — New Records Keep Falling
In October 2025, Musk became the first person in history to reach a $500 billion net worth. The milestone that once seemed impossible had become reality.
Then, just two months later in December 2025, the reinstatement of his Tesla pay package — the same one critics had mocked back in 2018 — helped push his fortune to approximately $700 billion.
At this point, the question wasn’t if he’d become a trillionaire. It was just when.
February 2026: SpaceX Merges With xAI — $750 Billion
In February 2026, SpaceX merged with Musk’s artificial intelligence company xAI in a major transaction that dramatically increased the value of his private-company holdings.
His estimated net worth after the deal: around $750 billion — making him richer than every other living person and richer than nearly every historical figure, even after adjusting for inflation.
June 2026: History Is Made — The World’s First Trillionaire
In June 2026, SpaceX launched what became the largest IPO in history. The company sold 555.6 million shares at $135 each, raising $75 billion and valuing SpaceX at $1.77 trillion.
Musk owns roughly 43% of SpaceX. At the IPO price, that stake alone was worth about $761 billion. Add his other holdings — primarily Tesla — worth around $260 billion, and his total net worth crossed $1.02 trillion.
Elon Musk had officially become the world’s first trillionaire.
But the story didn’t stop there.
SpaceX Keeps Climbing — $1.35 Trillion, Then $1.5 Trillion
SpaceX started trading publicly under the ticker “SPCX.” It closed its first day at $160 per share — well above the $135 IPO price.
Then it surged again, closing at $192 per share and giving SpaceX a market cap of around $2.52 trillion. At that level, Musk’s net worth hit approximately $1.35 trillion.
The climb continued. With SpaceX trading at a $2.8 trillion market cap, Musk’s ~43% stake is worth about $1.2 trillion on its own. Add his non-SpaceX holdings of roughly $260 billion, and his total net worth now stands at approximately $1.5 trillion.
Elon Musk Net Worth Milestones at a Glance
| Year / Event | Net Worth |
|---|---|
| June 2026 — SpaceX hits $2.8T market cap | $1.5 Trillion |
| June 2026 — Two days after SpaceX IPO surge | $1.35 Trillion |
| June 2026 — SpaceX prices largest IPO ever | $1.02 Trillion |
| Feb 2026 — SpaceX-xAI merger | $750 Billion |
| Dec 2025 — Tesla pay package reinstated | $700 Billion |
| Oct 2025 — First person to reach $500B | $500 Billion |
| Dec 2024 — SpaceX hits $350B valuation | $400 Billion |
| Nov 2024 — Post-election surge | $348 Billion |
| June 2023 — Reclaims #1 from Bernard Arnault | $192 Billion |
| Jan 2023 — Largest personal fortune loss ever | $137 Billion |
| Dec 2022 — Tesla crash + Twitter buyout | $134 Billion |
| Nov 2021 — Tesla peak | $335 Billion |
| Jan 2021 — Becomes richest person on Earth | $195 Billion |
| Nov 2020 — Passes Bill Gates | $128 Billion |
| Jan 2020 — Start of pandemic rise | $28 Billion |
| 2018 — “Funding secured” era | $20 Billion |
| 2012 — First appears on billionaires list | $2 Billion |
| 2010 — Tesla IPO | $650 Million |
| 2008 — Near bankruptcy | ~$0 liquid |
| 2004 — Invests in Tesla Series A | ~$200 Million |
| 2002 — PayPal sold to eBay | $180 Million |
| 1999 — Zip2 sold to Compaq | $22 Million |
What Makes This Story So Unbelievable
The path to $1.5 trillion was anything but smooth.
Musk crashed a million-dollar car he couldn’t even be bothered to insure. He poured his entire PayPal fortune into rockets and electric cars when both industries looked like losing bets. He nearly went bankrupt in 2008. He suffered the largest personal wealth collapse in recorded history. He bought Twitter and watched the world predict his downfall.
None of it stopped him.
By June 2026, SpaceX — the company born from a $100 million gamble in 2002 — had gone public in the biggest IPO of all time and catapulted Musk into territory no human being had ever reached.
In 1999, he was a millionaire. In 2012, he became a billionaire. In 2026, he became a trillionaire.
And if SpaceX keeps rising? The next milestones might be even harder to believe.
For more insights into how the world’s boldest entrepreneurs build, lose, and rebuild extraordinary wealth, visit EarlyMagazine UK — where visionary ambition and financial storytelling come together.

