Stealth wealth is over. Gen Z’s rich kids aren’t hiding their privilege—they’re flaunting it. On TikTok, a new generation of nepo babies is going viral for openly flexing the kind of generational wealth that makes “quiet luxury” look like yesterday’s aesthetic.
From stitched videos about “growing up with a trust fund” to first-person confessionals about attending private Swiss boarding schools, nepo babies are leaning into transparency—and Gen Z’s obsession with authenticity is rewarding them for it.
The unapologetic trend stands in stark contrast to the old rules of stealth wealth: no logos, muted wardrobes, modest demeanor. These kids never got the memo—or they tossed it.
“I didn’t choose to be born rich, but I’m not going to pretend I’m not,” said one TikTok creator in a now-viral video with over 3 million views.
The anti-stealth wealth aesthetic
While millennials elevated “quiet luxury” as a way to signal status without excess, Gen Z’s online elite are doing the opposite. Think: family-owned jets, polo vacations, Goyard-covered dorm rooms, and unfiltered breakdowns of how much it really costs to maintain generational wealth.
The rise of the “loud privilege” genre is fueled by a TikTok algorithm that rewards extremes—radical transparency, confessions, and lifestyle content that evokes either envy or outrage. The more unrelatable, the more viral.
Even the fashion has changed. Instead of beige cashmere and The Row minimalism, this new aesthetic embraces logo-heavy designer gear, bespoke tailoring, and hyper-specific rich-kid codes (like referencing yacht brands or niche luxury schools).
“It’s not about hiding money anymore,” said one branding strategist. “It’s about being rich in a way that feels human, not curated.”
The backlash and the business
Of course, not everyone is thrilled. Critics say the trend glamorizes inequality and distracts from systemic privilege. But that hasn’t stopped creators from doubling down—or brands from jumping in.
Some of the most viral nepo baby accounts are now securing paid partnerships with luxury brands looking to tap into aspirational wealth content. Others are monetizing their own lives, turning “rich kid transparency” into a revenue stream.
And it’s working. One creator with fewer than 100K followers reportedly earns five figures a month from brand deals and affiliate links tied to luxury home decor. Another parlayed her viral nepo baby confessions into a book deal.