When will Elon Musk’s net worth hit $1 trillion?

Elon Musk's trillion-dollar milestone: Could it happen before end-2026?

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Tesla Inc. founder Elon Musk
Elon Musk leads: As of February 26, 2026, the Tesla/Space X chief needs roughly another $150–$151 billion for his net worth to hit $1 trillion.
Reuters

Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, could hit $1 trillion in net worth as early as end-2026, according to latest estimates.

As of February 26, 2026, Forbes data shows that the Tesla & SpaceX CEO’s real-time net worth at $849.3 billion (up $5.8B or 0.68% from the prior trading day’s close). 

This makes him the world’s richest person by a wide margin and the first to cross $800 billion. 

Bloomberg's estimate is lower, around $670 – $680B, due to more conservative private-company valuations. In general, prediction markets resolve based on Forbes.

Forbes' wealth leaderboard as of February 26, 2026.

On Tuesday, tech titans dominated the leaderboard while luxury and industrial giants took heavy hits, according to Forbes’ Real-Time Billionaires List, which tracks net-worth changes since 5 pm EST the previous trading day.

Musk led all winners with a stunning $5.7 billion gain, pushing his fortune further ahead of the pack. 

Mark Zuckerberg followed closely, adding $4.8 billion as Meta shares climbed. 

Former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer gained $2.9 billion, while Dell founder Michael Dell and Nvidia chief Jensen Huang each rose $2.3 billion. 

Wealth tied to tech 

The five biggest daily winners were all tied to technology and innovation-driven companies.

On the downside, LVMH chairman Bernard Arnault suffered the steepest loss, down $2.4 billion.

CATL chairman Robin Zeng shed $2.3 billion, L’Oréal heiress Françoise Bettencourt Meyers dropped $1.6 billion, Reliance Industries chairman Mukesh Ambani lost $1.4 billion, and biotech billionaire Patrick Soon-Shiong gave back $1.2 billion.

Elon Musk's total net worth stood at $234 billion in 2023 (with a $96.6 billion gain that year). Now (Feb. 26, 2026), he's worth $849 billion, as per Forbes.

The contrasting fortunes reflect ongoing market rotation: investors rewarded AI, electric vehicles, and cloud computing while punishing exposure to luxury goods, batteries, and traditional conglomerates amid shifting economic signals.

Forbes’ Real-Time Billionaires List, updated continuously from public market data, offers the most transparent daily snapshot of the world’s wealthiest individuals. 

Prediction game

As for Musk hitting $1 trillion, no one can predict the exact date — it’s highly speculative and depends on volatile factors like Tesla's stock price, SpaceX/xAI valuations, market conditions, and potential IPOs or mergers.

In general, prediction markets and analysts point to a “strong chance” in late 2026 or 2027.

Musk needs roughly another $150–$151 billion to hit $1 trillion. 

His wealth breaks down mainly as:

  • ~12% stake in Tesla (publicly traded, so highly volatile).

  • ~42% stake in SpaceX (valued at $800B via a December 2025 private tender offer).

  • Stakes in the merged X (formerly Twitter)/xAI entity (valued around $125B+ including debt in recent reports), plus smaller holdings like Neuralink and The Boring Company.

The current movements in wealth serve as a vivid reminder that even the richest fortunes remain tightly linked to stock-market volatility. 

In a single trading session, more than $25 billion in combined paper wealth changed hands among just these ten names.

Kalshi (which resolves strictly on Forbes' real-time billionaires list) currently shows:

  • 69% chance before 2027 (i.e., sometime in 2026).

  • 86% chance before 2028.

  • 90–91% chance before 2029.

Other sources align closely:

  • Polymarket has hovered around 66% for before end-2026.

  • Analysts and AI models (e.g., recent ChatGPT estimates) often cite 75%+ odds for 2026 or a more conservative 2027.

Drivers

Key drivers of Musk’s wealth could include Tesla's robotaxi/AI growth, SpaceX milestones (or IPO), or the X/xAI merger boosting private valuations.

There’s a realistic shot at late 2026 if growth continues at recent paces, but 2027 is the safer consensus bet. 

It’s all paper wealth tied to illiquid/private assets and stock swings — no guarantees, and a market dip could delay it by years.

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