Skip to navigationSkip to main contentSkip to right columnADVERTISEMENTDanielle LiveranceWed, July 15, 2026 at 4:30 PM GMT+2 5 min readQuick ReadCuban's 246 Shark Tank deals returned roughly 8-9x on $33 million invested, but every company stayed private, locking out ordinary investors entirely.Only 13% of US households qualify as accredited investors, legally barring 87% of Americans from the private-company asset class Shark Tank showcases weekly.Cuban's $1 million 2014 bet on BeatBox Beverages now generates over $200 million annually, gains he keeps entirely as the company never went public.Don't wait: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just revealed his top 10 AI stocks. See the full list FREE now.Over more than a decade on the most-watched investing show in television history, Mark Cuban made 246 deals on "Shark Tank." Millions of Americans watched him hear pitches, haggle over equity, and shake hands on live television. Not one of those 246 companies has ever issued an IPO or become publicly traded, meaning not one has produced a ticker symbol viewers could actually buy.gageskidmore / FlickrThe Numbers Behind the DealsCuban invested in 246 of 1,268 pitches, a 19.4% hit rate, before leaving after Season 16, according to Shark Tank Insights. He put in roughly $33 million of his own money by his accounting to CNBC and has seen about $35 million in cash returns plus equity he values at "at least $250 million," a paper return of 8-9x. Of the 246 deals, 128 (52%) were solo and 117 were group deals with other sharks. His average check was $224,762, the median $150,000, and his largest single bet was $2 million for 20% of Ten Thirty One Productions. All built on a fortune of roughly $6 billion, traceable to the $5.7 billion sale of Broadcast.com to Yahoo in 1999. The returns are real. They remain completely out of reach for viewers.Don't wait: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just revealed his top 10 AI stocks. See the full list FREE now.The Velvet RopeEvery one of those 246 companies is private, sitting behind what one analyst called "the velvet rope of accredited investing, a world that intentionally excludes ordinary savers." To invest in private companies like those on Shark Tank, the SEC requires you to be an "accredited investor", defined as having a net worth above $1 million (excluding your primary home) or annual income above $200,000 ($300,000 for couples) for the past two years. Only about 13% of US households clear that bar, leaving roughly 87% of Americans legally barred from the exact asset class Shark Tank makes look accessible every week. The rule protects unsophisticated investors from risky, illiquid bets. Its practical effect reserves the most exciting opportunities for those already wealthy.Terms and Privacy PolicyEU DSA contactPrivacy & Cookie SettingsMore Info