Just did the math on something kind of wild. Elon Musk's net worth sits around $676 billion as of late last year, which makes him by far the richest person on the planet. To put that in perspective, the second richest guy (Larry Page from Alphabet) has roughly $254 billion. So yeah, there's a pretty massive gap.



Now here's where it gets interesting. Everyone throws around different numbers when trying to figure out how much does musk make a day. Some sources say $90 million, but that's using a 10-year average. If you actually look at his wealth growth from 2024 to now, the picture changes pretty significantly.

He closed 2024 at $421.2 billion. Fast forward to where we are now, and we're looking at roughly $254.8 billion in gains throughout 2025. That breaks down to approximately $698 million per day. Yeah, that's the number we're talking about.

But wait, there's more. Divide that by 24 hours and you get about $29 million per hour. The CDC recommends seven hours of sleep per night, right? So while you're getting your recommended rest, Musk is making something like $203.5 million. In your sleep. Every single night.

And that's before we even factor in the Tesla pay package that just got approved by shareholders. We're talking about a potential $1 trillion package if he hits certain milestones. The requirements are pretty ambitious though — selling a million humanoid robots, hitting 10 million self-driving subscriptions, getting Tesla's valuation to $8.5 trillion. If he pulls it off, he'd become the world's first trillionaire.

Musk himself said it pretty clearly when the news dropped: 'What we're about to embark upon is not merely a new chapter of the future of Tesla but a whole new book.' Pretty telling statement about the scale of what's being planned.

So yeah, the wealth disparity is almost incomprehensible when you break it down hour by hour. Makes you think about how concentrated wealth really is in today's economy.
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