Elon Musk's $1 trillion fortune is so vast that Jeff Bezos is now closer in wealth to the average American

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Skip to navigationSkip to main contentSkip to right columnADVERTISEMENTAnnaMarie HoulisSun, June 14, 2026 at 6:30 PM GMT+2 4 min readElon Musk just became the first person in history to surpass a net worth of $1 trillion, thanks to a surge in the valuation of SpaceX, combined with his holdings in Tesla, xAI and X. (1)“[Musk’s net worth] is more than the net worth of Larry Page, $294.1B, Sergey Brin, $271.3B, Jeff Bezos, $248.9B and Mark Zuckerberg, $194.8B, combined,” reads a viral X post (2).Must ReadRobert Kiyosaki says this 1 asset will surge 400% in a year and begs investors not to miss this ‘explosion’The ultra-rich use these 5 real estate strategies to build wealth while they sleep — you can start with just $100Millionaires under 43 are reshaping investing — just 25% of their portfolios are in stocks. Here’s where their money is goingThat’s right. Musk makes the net worths of the world’s richest people (3) somehow seem small.“The average American is now closer to Jeff Bezos in net worth than Jeff Bezos is to Elon Musk,” another viral X post (4) reads.Putting Musk’s wealth into perspectiveWhile it sounds absurd, since Bezos is one of the richest people on the planet, the numbers illustrate just how enormous the gap has become between Musk’s wealth and his billionaire counterparts.Bezos’ fortune is currently estimated at just below $250 billion. That means that the difference between Bezos and Musk is over $750 billion. Meanwhile, according to recent estimates, the median American household (5) has a net worth of roughly $193,000. That means that the difference between the average American household and Bezos, while massive, is indeed smaller.The difference between a billion and a trillion, after all, is far greater than you may think. To put it into perspective: A billion seconds equals almost 32 years. A trillion seconds? More than 31,000 years.The same principle applies to wealth. Once fortunes reach the hundreds of billions, adding another several hundred billion creates a gap so large that those playing catch up appear relatively closer to ordinary households in terms of wealth — albeit no one is going to feel bad for them.Read More: