A Banner Year for America’s Billionaire Class
America’s richest citizens have never had it better. In just the first nine months of 2025, the collective wealth of U.S. billionaires surged by $698 billion, driven by roaring stock markets, booming tech valuations, and the AI-fueled rally that lifted everything from chipmakers to cloud infrastructure firms.
According to Bloomberg’s Billionaires Index, the top 20 wealthiest Americans now control more than $2.7 trillion, a figure larger than the GDP of France.
The surge has reignited debate about wealth inequality and tax policy, especially as former President Donald Trump pushes for a renewal of his 2017 tax cuts and new incentives for “entrepreneurial wealth creation.” Critics say those changes would overwhelmingly benefit the same ultra-rich individuals whose fortunes have already ballooned.
Tech Titans Lead the Gains
The AI boom has been the single largest driver of billionaire wealth growth this year.
Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, saw his net worth soar past $310 billion as Tesla rebounded from early-year lows and xAI’s private valuation topped $200 billion. Jeff Bezos added nearly $65 billion, fueled by Amazon’s record cloud revenue and AI investments.
Meanwhile, Mark Zuckerberg and Larry Page each saw their fortunes rise by more than $40 billion, reflecting Meta’s and Alphabet’s dominance in the generative AI space.
Outside of tech, Warren Buffett and the Walton family also gained substantially as markets rallied on consumer strength and corporate earnings resilience.
“The wealth concentration is now the highest it’s ever been in modern American history,” said Gabriel Zucman, economist at UC Berkeley and director of the EU Tax Observatory. “And it’s accelerating faster than most policymakers realize.”
Trump’s Tax Proposal Could Extend the Boom
On the campaign trail, Trump has signaled plans to extend or expand key provisions of his 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), which are currently set to expire in 2025.
Among those are the reduction of corporate taxes from 35% to 21%, the 20% pass-through deduction for small businesses, and lower top individual rates, all measures that disproportionately benefit high earners and business owners.
His advisors have also floated a potential “Investment Growth Credit”, which would reward companies that repatriate profits to the U.S. or invest in “strategic domestic sectors,” such as manufacturing and energy.
Economists say such measures would likely give another short-term boost to stock prices and corporate earnings, translating directly into further gains for the billionaire class.
“Trump’s proposed tax plan is essentially a wealth multiplier for the ultra-rich,” said William Gale, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. “It rewards capital ownership at the expense of wage earners.”
Wealth Inequality Reaches Record Levels
According to the Federal Reserve’s latest Distributional Financial Accounts, the top 1% of Americans now hold nearly 33% of all household wealth, while the bottom half hold just 2.5%.
That imbalance has widened since the pandemic as asset prices, from stocks to real estate, recovered faster than wages.
“This is what economists call a ‘wealth effect without inclusivity,’” said Zucman. “Financial assets are booming, but most Americans don’t own enough of them to benefit.”
At the same time, the U.S. deficit has ballooned to nearly $1.8 trillion, prompting renewed calls from fiscal conservatives to cut spending rather than raise taxes, a move critics say would shift more of the burden onto middle- and working-class households.
Political Stakes Are Rising
Tax fairness has become a defining issue of the 2025 election cycle. Progressive lawmakers argue that without a more progressive tax code, the U.S. risks entrenching a permanent plutocracy.
Senator Elizabeth Warren renewed her call for a 2% annual wealth tax on households worth over $50 million, while the Biden administration has proposed a minimum 25% tax on billionaires’ unrealized gains.
But those efforts face fierce opposition from Republicans – and even some centrist Democrats – who warn that new taxes could hurt investment, innovation, and U.S. competitiveness.
“Taxing unrealized wealth is a nonstarter,” said Larry Kudlow, former Trump economic advisor. “We need to grow the pie, not punish the people who built it.”
The Market Loves Certainty, and Billionaires Benefit Most
For investors, the political uncertainty over tax reform has done little to dampen enthusiasm. The S&P 500 is up 18% year to date, led by tech and energy stocks.
That rally has magnified the fortunes of those who already own the most capital, meaning that as long as markets stay strong and taxes stay low, billionaire wealth will keep compounding.
“Every major market event this year – the AI rally, the Fed pivot, the strong dollar, has benefited the top of the wealth pyramid disproportionately,” said Savita Subramanian, head of U.S. equity strategy at Bank of America. “And the proposed tax extensions could lock in that advantage for years.”
The Bottom Line
America’s billionaire class just added $698 billion to its net worth in 2025, and the momentum shows no sign of slowing.
While supporters see Trump’s proposed tax extensions as fuel for growth, critics warn they could cement a wealth divide that’s already at historic highs.
For now, the ultra-rich are celebrating another record-breaking year. For everyone else, the question remains the same: how much prosperity will actually trickle down?





