Across his most notable film roles, Damon has pulled in roughly $183.85 million in listed acting salaries alone — not counting bonuses, backend profit shares, or producing credits. That total helps explain why Matt Damon’s net worth now sits around $170 million.
Matt Damon didn’t become one of Hollywood’s most bankable stars overnight. He built his fortune one role at a time — starting with a modest paycheck for “Good Will Hunting” and eventually landing eight-figure deals for franchise blockbusters.
Now, with Damon playing Odysseus in Christopher Nolan’s massive $250 million epic “The Odyssey,” fans are curious all over again about what the actor actually earns per film. His paycheck for this one hasn’t been made public. But given his track record with Nolan, there’s a good chance he took another discounted rate — just like he did on their last project together.
Let’s break down exactly how Damon’s salary has grown (and occasionally shrunk) over nearly three decades in the movie business.
Matt Damon’s Notable Movie Salaries At A Glance
| Movie | Year | Reported Salary |
|---|---|---|
| Good Will Hunting | 1997 | $350,000 |
| The Legend of Bagger Vance | 2000 | $7,000,000 |
| All the Pretty Horses | 2000 | $5,500,000 |
| Ocean’s Eleven | 2001 | $5,000,000 |
| The Bourne Identity | 2002 | $10,000,000 |
| The Bourne Supremacy | 2004 | $26,000,000 |
| The Brothers Grimm | 2005 | $10,000,000 |
| The Bourne Ultimatum | 2007 | $26,000,000 |
| The Martian | 2015 | $25,000,000 |
| Jason Bourne | 2016 | $25,000,000 |
| Air | 2023 | $40,000,000 |
| Oppenheimer | 2023 | $4,000,000 |
The Movie That Started It All: “Good Will Hunting” ($350,000)
Before Matt Damon was a movie star, he was just a broke actor with a script he’d written alongside his best friend, Ben Affleck.
The two sold that screenplay for $600,000, splitting it down the middle. On top of his roughly $300,000 cut from the sale, Damon negotiated an additional $350,000 to actually play the lead role of Will Hunting.
All in, Damon walked away with about $650,000 before taxes and fees. Not bad for a film that went on to earn over $225 million worldwide, win Damon and Affleck an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay, and score Robin Williams a Best Supporting Actor statue.
Climbing The Ladder: The Early 2000s Paydays
“All the Pretty Horses” ($5.5 Million)
Just three years after his “Good Will Hunting” payday, Damon commanded $5.5 million to co-star with Penélope Cruz. The movie flopped commercially, pulling in only about $18 million against a $57 million budget — but Damon’s fee proved his stock was rising fast.
“The Legend of Bagger Vance” ($7 Million)
Robert Redford’s golf drama, also starring Will Smith and Charlize Theron, paid Damon $7 million. The film underperformed at theaters, but the check moved him closer to the elite $10 million club.
“Ocean’s Eleven” ($5 Million)
Playing pickpocket Linus Caldwell alongside George Clooney and Brad Pitt earned Damon $5 million — less than he might have scored as a solo lead, but the tradeoff put him in one of the most star-studded ensembles of the decade. It paid off, spawning a hit trilogy.
Becoming Jason Bourne: A Franchise Worth Millions
“The Bourne Identity” ($10 Million)
Studios took a gamble casting Damon, a dramatic actor, as a lethal assassin. That bet reshaped the spy-thriller genre and turned Damon into an action star practically overnight, for a $10 million payday.
“The Bourne Supremacy” ($26 Million)
After the first film’s success, Damon’s price more than doubled to $26 million. Studios weren’t taking a risk on him anymore — they needed him to keep the franchise alive.
“The Bourne Ultimatum” ($26 Million, Plus Bonuses)
Damon earned another $26 million upfront for the trilogy’s most successful entry, which grossed over $440 million globally. Once backend bonuses were factored in, his total take may have landed somewhere between $30 million and $35 million.
“Jason Bourne” ($25 Million)
After skipping “The Bourne Legacy,” Damon returned for a reported $25 million payday — despite having only about 25 lines in the entire film. That works out to roughly $1 million per line, though the number ignores the months of stunt training and physical prep the role demanded.
Other Standout Salaries
“The Brothers Grimm” ($10 Million)
Pairing with Heath Ledger in Terry Gilliam’s fantasy adventure, Damon proved he could land eight-figure deals even outside the Bourne franchise, despite the movie’s mixed reception.
“The Martian” ($25 Million)
Carrying much of Ridley Scott’s space survival film solo, Damon earned $25 million and an Oscar nomination for Best Actor. The movie grossed more than $630 million worldwide.
“Air” ($40 Million)
Damon’s biggest non-Bourne payday came from “Air,” the story of Nike’s pursuit of Michael Jordan. Amazon paid $160 million for the project before a single scene was shot, largely because Damon and Affleck were attached. Damon both starred and produced through their company Artists Equity — and his combined acting and producing compensation reportedly hit around $40 million.
When Damon Took A Pay Cut On Purpose: “Oppenheimer” ($4 Million)
Not every big role came with a big check.
Damon, along with co-stars Robert Downey Jr. and Emily Blunt, agreed to a fraction of their usual rates to work with Christopher Nolan on “Oppenheimer.” Damon’s fee reportedly dropped to just $4 million — a steep discount from his standard $20-25 million range.
The gamble worked out. “Oppenheimer” became a worldwide blockbuster and swept seven Academy Awards, cementing Damon’s working relationship with Nolan and setting up his casting as the lead in “The Odyssey.”
The $250 Million Payday Damon Walked Away From
Believe it or not, Damon’s biggest almost-payday is one he never collected.
James Cameron once offered Damon the role of Jake Sully in “Avatar,” along with 10% of the film’s profits. Damon turned it down because filming would have clashed with “The Bourne Ultimatum,” and he didn’t want to derail that franchise.
“Avatar” went on to become one of the highest-grossing films ever made. Damon has since estimated that the profit share he passed up could have been worth more than $250 million.
The Bottom Line
From a $350,000 indie darling to $40 million producing deals, Matt Damon’s paychecks tell the story of a career built on smart choices — not just big numbers. Sometimes that meant chasing the biggest check available. Other times, like with Nolan, it meant taking a pay cut for a shot at something bigger. Either way, it’s added up to one of the most impressive earning histories in Hollywood.
Stay tuned to EarlyMagazine UK for more inside looks at Hollywood’s biggest paydays and the stars behind them.

