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Mapped: The Richest Billionaires in U.S. States

Mapped: The Richest Billionaires in Every U.S. State

The number of billionaires in the U.S. increased 5% compared to last year, going from 720 super wealthy individuals to 775. The richest of the rich are concentrated in states like Texas, California, and New York, but there is almost one billionaire in every single state.

This map uses data from Forbes to showcase the wealthiest billionaire in each state.

The State-by-State Breakdown

According to Forbes, just four states are home to 61% of the country’s billionaires: California (179), New York (130), Florida (92), and Texas (73).

Here’s a closer look at the data on who takes the title of the richest in each state:

Name State Residence Net Worth (Est.) Source of Wealth
Jimmy Rane Alabama Abbeville $1.2 B Lumber
Arturo Moreno Arizona Phoenix $4.8 B Billboards, Los Angeles Angels
Jim Walton Arkansas Bentonville $64.4 B Walmart
Larry Page California Palo Alto $105.0 B Google
Philip Anschutz Colorado Denver $10.8 B Energy, sports, entertainment
Ray Dalio Connecticut Greenwich $19.1 B Hedge funds
Ken Griffin Florida Miami $32.7 B Hedge funds
Dan Cathy, Bubba Cathy, and Trudy Cathy White Georgia Atlanta $11.0 B Chick-fil-A
Larry Ellison Hawaii Lanai $146.0 B Oracle
Frank VanderSloot Idaho Idaho Falls $3.2 B Nutrition, wellness products
Lukas Walton Illinois Chicago $22.9 B Walmart
Carl Cook Indiana Bloomington $10.3 B Medical devices
Harry Stine Iowa Adel $6.9 B Agriculture
Charles Koch Kansas Wichitia $56.9 B Koch Industries
Tamara Gustavson Kentucky Lexington $7.3 B Self storage
Gayle Benson Louisiana New Orleans $4.7 B New Orleans Saints
Susan Alfond Maine Scarborough $2.7 B Shoes
Annette Lerner & family Maryland Chevy Chase $6.3 B Real Estate
Abigail Johnson Massachusetts Milton $21.0 B Fidelity
Daniel Gilbert Michigan Franklin $19.5 B Quicken Loans
Glen Taylor Minnesota Mankato $2.6 B Printing
Thomas Duff & James Duff Mississippi Hattiesburg $2.3 B Tires, diversified
John Morris Missouri Springfield $8.3 B Sporting goods retail
Dennis Washington Montana Missoula $6.4 B Construction, mining
Warren Buffet Nebraska Omaha $117.0 B Berkshire Hathaway
Mirian Adelson & family Nevada Las Vegas $36.2 B Casinos
Rick Cohen & family New Hampshire Keene $18.8 B Warehouse automation
Rocco Commisso New Jersey Saddle River $8.0 B Telecom
Ron Corio New Mexico Albuquerque $1.7 B Solar
Michael Bloomberg New York New York City $94.5 B Bloomberg LP
James Goodnight North Carolina Cary $9.3 B Software
Gary Tharaldson North Dakota Fargo $1.2 B Hotels
Lex Wexner & family Ohio New Albany $6.0 B Retail
Harold Hamm & family Oklahoma Oklahoma City $18.5 B Oil & gas
Phil Knight & family Oregon Hillsboro $41.8 B Nike
Jeff Yass Pennsylvania Haverford $28.5 B Trading, investments
Jonathan Nelson Rhode Island Providence $3.1 B Private equity
Robert Faith South Carolina Charleston $5.2 B Real estate management
T. Denny Sanford South Dakota Sioux Falls $2.0 B Banking, credit cards
Thomas Frist Jr. & family Tennessee Nashville $22.3 B Hospitals
Elon Musk Texas Austin $230.0 B Tesla, SpaceX
Gail Miller Utah Salt Lake City $4.2 B Car dealerships
John Abele Vermont Shelburne $1.9 B Healthcare
Jacqueline Mars Virginia The Plains $39.4 B Candy, pet food
Jeff Bezos Washington Medina $149.0 B Amazon
John Menard Jr. Wisconsin Eau Claire $18.1 B Home improvement stores
John Mars Wyoming Jackson $39.4 B Candy, pet food

Many billionaires in the U.S. are extremely well-known, such as California’s Larry Page, New York’s Michael Bloomberg, or Washington state’s Jeff Bezos.

Interestingly, Bill Gates doesn’t take the top spot as the richest billionaire in Washington because Bezos has a higher net worth—$149 billion vs. Gates’ $104 billion—although they do live in the exact same town of Medina, WA.

Nearly every state is home to at least one billionaire, some far wealthier than others, like Nebraska’s Warren Buffett ($117 billion), compared to Alabama’s Jimmy Rane ($1.2 billion). Some new states, which gained billionaires this year include Alabama, New Hampshire, and Vermont.

Billionaire Wealth

The number of billionaires globally is following a different trend than the one in the U.S., declining year-over-year, and seeing billionaire wealth overall decrease by $500 billion.

The U.S. is home to almost 30% of all the world’s billionaires and while a few like Sam Bankman-Fried and Kanye West lost their billionaire status this year, many continue to get richer. In addition to Ron Corio, New Mexico’s first ever billionaire, eight other individuals on the U.S. list gained billionaire status in the last four years.

Finance and investments, food and beverage, fashion and retail, and technology are the top sources of wealth for U.S. billionaires, with almost 50% of them gaining their fortunes from these specific industries.

The post Mapped: The Richest Billionaires in U.S. States appeared first on Visual Capitalist.