Musk's net worth has reached $970 billion, just one step away from becoming the world's first trillionaire. His wealth translates to $992 earned per second, surpassing the annual GDP of over 125 countries and being double the proportion of wealth that John D. Rockefeller had at his peak. For an average American family to amass a comparable fortune, they would need to work non-stop for over 11 million years.
Musk stands on the threshold of becoming the world's first trillionaire, and the sheer scale of his wealth has become difficult for the average person to comprehend intuitively.
According to a report by The Wall Street Journal on February 2, Musk's current net worth is approximately $970 billion, the vast majority of which is held in equity. Once SpaceX goes public with its IPO, this figure is highly likely to surpass the trillion-dollar mark. Averaged over his 31-year entrepreneurial career, this means he accumulates wealth at a rate of $992 per second, or $3.6 million per hour.
This magnitude of wealth already exceeds 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 around $480 billion. Measured as a proportion of U.S. GDP, Musk's wealth represents about 3% of the U.S. GDP, easily surpassing that of America's historically wealthiest figure, John D. Rockefeller.
Wealth Composition: 90% Locked in Equity
According to analysis by The Wall Street Journal, of Musk's $970 billion wealth, the largest single component comes from his pre-IPO stake in SpaceX, valued at approximately $538 billion; his Tesla holdings are worth about $167 billion; and combined stock options from both companies total around $150 billion and are exercisable at any time.
Additionally, The Boring Company, a tunneling venture, and Neuralink, a brain-computer interface company, are each valued at roughly $5 billion, while real estate, aircraft, and other investment assets amount to about $104 billion, as estimated by the 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 liquidity remains constrained. Musk himself stated publicly in 2020 that he "owns no house" and sold several California properties, though he has since acquired property in Texas.
The Time Dimension: An Average U.S. Family Needs 11 Million Years of Work
To make this number more tangible, linking Musk's wealth to the dimension of time: Over the 31 years since co-founding his first U.S. tech company in 1995, he has accumulated, on average, approximately $59,500 per minute, $85.7 million per day, and $31.3 billion per year.
Based on the 2024 U.S. median household income of $83,730, an average American family would need to work for over 11 million years to accumulate wealth equivalent to Musk's.
Philosopher and economist Ingrid Robeyns has written that the wealth growth rate of the world's richest individuals has far exceeded the cognitive boundaries of ordinary people.
She estimates that if Musk worked 70 hours per week, took no vacations until age 75, his hourly wage over his career would be about $4.2 million. Musk is known for his intense work ethic—after acquiring Twitter (now X), he stated his weekly working hours jumped from around 80 to over 120 hours.
Imagining Purchasing Power: From 2.4 Million Homes to All NFL Teams
Presenting the purchasing power of $970 billion through a series of tangible scenarios:
This sum could purchase approximately 2.4 million average American homes; or buy all 32 NFL teams and 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, which collectively employ over 4 million people.
Historical Context: Surpassing Rockefeller, Rivaling Industrial Era Titans
Measured by wealth as a percentage of GDP, Musk has surpassed the historically recognized wealthiest American, John D. Rockefeller. The wealth Rockefeller amassed by 1937 was about $1.4 billion, representing roughly 1.5% of the U.S. GDP at the time; Musk's wealth constitutes about 3% of the current U.S. GDP, double that proportion.
Rockefeller capitalized on the industrial wave, building Standard Oil into a monopoly that was eventually broken up by the federal government. Musk's fortune is built on three 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 bet on Musk and has minted numerous employee millionaires.








