Author: Zhao Ying
Source: Wall Street News
Elon Musk is on the verge of becoming the world's first trillionaire, with a fortune already so vast it's difficult for the average person to comprehend.
According to a February 2nd report by *The Wall Street Journal*, Musk's current net worth is approximately $970 billion, held overwhelmingly in equity. Once SpaceX's IPO materializes, this figure will very likely cross the one-trillion-dollar threshold. Calculated over his 31-year entrepreneurial career, this translates to accumulating wealth at an average rate of $992 per second, or $3.6 million per hour.
This magnitude of wealth surpasses the annual GDP of over 125 countries worldwide, including Norway, Thailand, Argentina, and South Africa—the latter being Musk's birthplace, with an annual GDP of about $480 billion. Measured as a percentage of U.S. GDP, Musk's wealth is roughly equivalent to 3% of it, easily surpassing the wealth of the historically richest American figure, John D. Rockefeller.
Wealth Composition: 90% Locked in Equity
According to the *WSJ* analysis, the largest single component of Musk's $970 billion fortune is his pre-IPO stake in SpaceX, valued at approximately $538 billion; his Tesla holdings are about $167 billion; and combined stock options from the two companies total around $150 billion, all currently exercisable. Additionally, the boring tunnel company The Boring Company and the brain-computer interface venture Neuralink are each valued at about $5 billion, while real estate, aircraft, and other investment assets amount to roughly $104 billion, as estimated by wealth intelligence firm Altrata.
This means the vast majority of Musk's wealth exists as paper assets, not readily available cash. He can borrow against his SpaceX and Tesla holdings, but his liquidity remains constrained. Musk himself stated publicly in 2020 that he "owns no house" and sold multiple California properties, though he has since acquired residences in Texas.
Time Dimension: An Average U.S. Household Would Need 11 Million Years
To make this number more concrete, tying Musk's wealth to a time dimension: over the 31 years since co-founding his first U.S. tech company in 1995, he has accumulated wealth at an average rate of about $59,500 per minute, $85.7 million per day, or $31.3 billion per year.
Using the 2024 U.S. median household income of $83,730, an average American household would need to work for over 11 million years to amass wealth comparable to Musk's.
Philosopher-economist Ingrid Robeyns has written that the wealth growth rate of the world's richest has far exceeded ordinary comprehension. She calculated that if Musk worked 70-hour weeks without vacation until age 75, his career hourly wage would be about $4.2 million. Musk is known for intense work schedules—after acquiring Twitter (now X), he stated his weekly hours increased from about 80 to over 120.
Purchasing Power Imagination: From 2.4 Million Homes to All NFL Teams
A series of tangible scenarios illustrate the purchasing power of $970 billion: This money could buy approximately 2.4 million average American homes; or purchase all 32 NFL teams plus all NBA teams, with over $500 billion remaining; or assemble a fleet of over 10,000 Gulfstream G700 private jets and cover five years of operating costs (including fuel); or simultaneously acquire Accenture, FedEx, Home Depot, UPS, Target, Kroger, Starbucks, CVS Health, Albertsons, Cracker Barrel, and Campbell's, with a combined workforce exceeding 4 million people.
Historical Context: Surpassing Rockefeller, Rivaling Industrial Titans
Measured by wealth as a percentage of GDP, Musk has surpassed Rockefeller, widely considered the richest figure in American history. The wealth Rockefeller amassed by 1937 was about $1.4 billion, roughly 1.5% of U.S. GDP at the time; Musk's fortune represents about 3% of current U.S. GDP—twice that proportion.
Rockefeller built his wealth on the wave of industrialization, turning Standard Oil into a monopoly giant that was eventually broken up by the federal government. Musk's fortune is built upon three technological frontiers: electric vehicles, commercial spaceflight, and artificial intelligence. Furthermore, the success of Tesla and SpaceX has also created tens of billions in returns for investors who backed Musk and made many employee millionaires.






