Overview

Overview

A live-ish partial gross-value estimate of Elon Musk's wealth.

How rich is Elon today?

This partial gross-value model tracks selected Tesla and SpaceX holdings using cited ownership records and dated or licensed price inputs.

Independent estimate: This is not a verified statement of personal finances. Market inputs may be delayed, and private holdings, cash, liabilities, ownership, and fallback values may be incomplete or wrong. Review the methodology and limitations.

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Partial Gross Holdings Value
$1.1T
Last updated: —
Tesla Holdings Value
Tesla, Inc. (TSLA) stocks owned
SpaceX Estimated Value
SpaceX (SPCX) private equity holdings

Wealth allocation

Toggle editorial estimates for an illustrative scenario; the headline value never changes

Illustrative scenario $0

Wealth breakdown

Estimated rows are optional scenarios, are not verified facts, and never affect the headline partial gross value

Gross holdings value explained

Why this partial calculation is not a statement of personal net worth or liquid cash

1. Public stock value

Tesla stock changes can move the estimate by billions in a single trading day.

2. Private-company limitations

Private holdings are difficult to value and are included only when both ownership and a lawful price input satisfy the published methodology.

3. Liquidity reality check

A huge net worth does not mean the person can instantly spend that entire amount.

Stock Trader

Live market summary and asset details of Tesla (TSLA) and SpaceX (SPCX).

Market Summary > Tesla, Inc. NASDAQ: TSLA
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Calculator

Compare any dollar amount to Elon Musk's current net worth.

Billionaire math

Type an amount below to compare it against the featured estimate.

Enter a number to calculate the percentage.

$1 million

Sounds massive. Compared to $1.1T, it is about 0.000091%.

$1 billion

Still only about 0.091% of $1.1T.

Meme Zone

Punchlines, billionaire math, burrito economics, and other healthy responses to twelve-zero numbers.

Hand-picked, developer-approved

Favorites

The jokes we would rescue first from a burning hard drive.

Original satire
02

“Where every refresh is either a yacht, a lawsuit, or a small country.”

03

“The market dipped and he accidentally lost a Delaware.”

04

“What happens if he sells all his stocks?”

05

“Because at some point, net worth becomes a fictional currency with better PR.”

06

“An independent estimate of one man’s money pile, updated for people who still compare avocado prices.”

How to Read a Beneficial-Ownership Filing

A practical guide to event dates, cover-page aggregates, footnotes, and amendments.

Original analysis · reviewed June 20, 2026

Schedule 13D and Schedule 13G filings answer a narrower question than “what is this person worth?” They identify reportable beneficial ownership of a class of registered securities under federal securities rules. The cover-page aggregate can include directly held shares, trust holdings, exercisable rights, or securities over which voting or dispositive power is shared.

Start with the event date

The filing date is not always the date of the ownership snapshot. Read the event date, amendment number, class title, and denominator used for the reported percentage. An amendment can supersede an older figure even when the older filing remains easy to find in search results.

Read the explanatory text

The headline number is rarely enough. Footnotes may identify restricted shares, vesting conditions, disclaimed ownership, voting agreements, proxies, or securities excluded from the aggregate. Those qualifications determine whether a simple shares-times-price calculation is meaningful.

Preserve the audit trail

A reproducible model records the SEC accession number, direct filing URL, filing date, event date, exact extracted passage, and the transformation applied. It should not silently combine an old option count with a newer common-stock count. When a later amendment appears, the model should retain the prior record for history but use the latest verified input prospectively.

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