Elon Musk became the world’s first trillionaire on June 12. His net worth reached roughly $1.1 trillion after SpaceX raised $75 billion in a record initial public offering (IPO).
The jump has widened an already historic gulf between the ultra-rich and everyone else. Forbes data shows a 1,464,078% wealth gap between the average billionaire and the average American.
Musk now sits far ahead of his peers. His fortune tops the combined wealth of Larry Page, Sergey Brin, Jeff Bezos, and Larry Ellison, according to Forbes. The same data tracks the top 10 billionaires at $3.1 trillion.
The billionaires added $68.2 billion in a single day. Meanwhile, most households saw little change in their own wealth. The concentration extends worldwide.
The richest 10% own 75% of global wealth, while the bottom half holds just 2%, according to the World Inequality Report.
“Fewer than 60,000 multi-millionaires now control three times more wealth than half of humanity combined. Within most countries, the bottom 50% rarely possess more than 5% of national wealth,” the report revealed.
In January, Oxfam reported that the 12 richest billionaires hold more wealth than the poorest half of humanity (over 4 billion people).
“The world has reached a critical juncture. Extreme inequality has reached the point where the super-rich can rig elections and economies, and deepen their power through politics, the media and institutions of justice. Meanwhile, billions of people face avoidable hardship and the erosion of their civil and political rights, and dissent and protest are crushed by governments the world over,” Oxfam noted.
In the US, the top 1% holds 31% of wealth, compared with 2.6% for the bottom half, perWealthVieu. Musk’s wealth surge after SpaceX’s Nasdaq debut widened that imbalance.
The record fortune landed during a squeeze on US households. Inflation hit 4.2% in May, a 3-year high amid the US-Iran war. Americans have spent $57.7 billion more on gasoline and diesel since the Iran war erupted on February 28.
That works out to roughly $440.6 per household. National gas prices now sit at $4.1 a gallon, according to a live tracker run by Brown University’s Watson School of International and Public Affairs. Meanwhile, US lawmakers have renewed their push for wealth taxes.
“Elon Musk just became the world’s first trillionaire. The typical American household would have to work more than 11 MILLION years to make Elon Musk’s level of wealth. We need a wealth tax,” Senator Elizabeth Warren posted.
Senator Bernie Sanders, Representative Pramila Jayapal, and more are backing the same approach.
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Today, Elon Musk, a trillionaire, pays the same amount into Social Security as someone making $184,500.If we end that absurdity and lift the cap on taxable income, we can make Social Security solvent for 75 years and expand benefits by $2,400. My Social Security bill does that.
— Sen. Bernie Sanders (@SenSanders) June 12, 2026
The coming months will test whether record fortunes shift the tax debate in Congress.
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