Beyoncé joins billionaire ranks after record-breaking year of tours and brand success

Beyoncé crosses $1b mark, joining Taylor Swift, Rihanna and Jay-Z among music billionaires

Last updated:
Nivetha Dayanand, Assistant Business Editor
3 MIN READ
Beyonce attends the 2016 MTV Video Music Awards on August 28, 2016 at Madison Square Garden in New York.
Beyonce attends the 2016 MTV Video Music Awards on August 28, 2016 at Madison Square Garden in New York.
AFP

Dubai: Beyoncé has officially joined the world’s billionaire entertainers, according to Forbes, marking another milestone in a career that has long transcended music. With a fortune now exceeding $1 billion, she becomes just the fifth musician to reach 10-figure status, joining her husband Jay-Z, Taylor Swift, Rihanna, and Bruce Springsteen.

The Houston-born artist’s recent success stemmed from the record-breaking Cowboy Carter Tour, a bold venture into country music that became the highest-grossing concert tour in the genre’s history, adding hundreds of millions to her net worth.

The road from Renaissance to Cowboy Carter

For most artists, 2023’s Renaissance World Tour, grossing nearly $600 million, would have been a career peak. For Beyoncé, it became a launch pad. She followed it by pivoting into country with the 2024 release of Cowboy Carter, an album that explored the Black roots of country music and earned her the first Grammy Award for Album of the Year of her career after four previous nominations.

The accompanying 2025 tour expanded her creative and financial reach. Combining high production values, signature choreography and multimedia storytelling, it included nine multi-night residencies across the US and Europe rather than the sprawling, city-to-city schedule typical of global pop tours. The results were staggering: $400 million in ticket sales and $50 million in merchandise, according to Forbes estimates.

Running her empire from within

Beyoncé’s rise to billionaire status didn’t happen overnight. The foundation was laid when she took full control of her career in 2010, founding Parkwood Entertainment to manage her production, touring, and film projects. The decision to self-manage allowed her to capture much larger profit shares from her music and performances.

“When I decided to manage myself, it was important that I didn’t go to some big management company,” she told an interviewer in 2013. “I felt like I wanted to follow the footsteps of Madonna and be a powerhouse and have my own empire and show other women when you get to this point in your career you don’t have to go sign with someone else and share your money and your success, you do it yourself.”

Parkwood’s integrated structure has proven crucial. By handling her tours, documentaries, and music in-house, Beyoncé has been able to own her creative output and its financial upside, something most artists rarely achieve.

Beyond music

While her touring revenue drives most of her wealth, Beyoncé has strategically diversified into business ventures that enhance her personal brand. Cécred, her haircare line launched in 2024, quickly became a high-end retail success. Her partnership with lucrative advertising collaborations such as Levi’s, contributed millions more.

A special halftime performance for Netflix’s first-ever Christmas Day NFL game reportedly netted her $50 million, while the accompanying advertising deals added up to another $10 million. Even her tour merchandise is run through her own company, ensuring that most profits stay within her ecosystem.

Billionaire status in context

Beyoncé’s rise highlights how the modern music business has evolved. Touring now accounts for up to 90% of major artists’ annual income, and global performers have leaned into immersive, large-scale tours as both cultural events and financial engines. Like Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour, Beyoncé’s recent shows combined concert performance with cinematic storytelling, resulting in a concert film distributed through AMC Theatres, from which she pocketed nearly half of its $44 million box office.

This self-contained model, in which artists act as performers, producers, and distributors, has become the blueprint for post-pandemic music success. Beyoncé is among its most polished practitioners.

- With inputs from Forbes.

Nivetha Dayanand
Nivetha DayanandAssistant Business Editor
Nivetha Dayanand is Assistant Business Editor at Gulf News, where she spends her days unpacking money, markets, aviation, and the big shifts shaping life in the Gulf. Before returning to Gulf News, she launched Finance Middle East, complete with a podcast and video series. Her reporting has taken her from breaking spot news to long-form features and high-profile interviews. Nivetha has interviewed Prince Khaled bin Alwaleed Al Saud, Indian ministers Hardeep Singh Puri and N. Chandrababu Naidu, IMF’s Jihad Azour, and a long list of CEOs, regulators, and founders who are reshaping the region’s economy. An Erasmus Mundus journalism alum, Nivetha has shared classrooms and newsrooms with journalists from more than 40 countries, which probably explains her weakness for data, context, and a good follow-up question. When she is away from her keyboard (AFK), you are most likely to find her at the gym with an Eminem playlist, bingeing One Piece, or exploring games on her PS5.
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