Evan Spiegel’s story about how he made money is a little strange. When he was 23, Mark Zuckerberg offered him $3 billion. He turned it down. That choice is probably the main reason his name is on all billionaire lists today. In some ways, though, that same choice has also meant years of seeing huge amounts of money disappear in real time.
Forbes says that Evan Spiegel is worth about $2.1 billion right now. Like it sounds, it’s pretty cool. But it’s also important to remember that this number was close to $13 billion in September 2021, when Snap’s share price briefly went over $83. It’s not just a market story that those two numbers are so far apart. To see how fragile tech-driven wealth really is, look at this.
Spiegel co-founded Snap Inc. with Bobby Murphy and Reggie Brown. It all began as a real Stanford class project. Before it was called Snapchat, the app was called Picaboo. By the end of 2012, it had more than a million daily active users. Spiegel left Stanford before finishing his degree to keep building it. He eventually came back to finish his credits and graduate in 2018. This is a small detail that gets lost in the bigger story of how Spiegel became a billionaire, but it says something about the person.
Spiegel has a lot of money that is mostly in Snap stock. Because the company is set up in two classes, he and Murphy control more than 70% of the voting power. Together, they own just over 20% of the shares. This is a common way for companies in Silicon Valley to be set up so that the founders can run the business without the board questioning every move. Because of this, Spiegel’s paper wealth changes by more than $200 million every time Snap’s stock moves by even a dollar. So, the Forbes number is more of a daily guess than a hard and fast fact.

It was quick to reach the top and quick to go down. When Apple put in place its App Tracking Transparency rules in 2022, they got rid of the ad-targeting infrastructure that Snap and many other platforms relied on. That year, Snap’s stock lost about 80% of its value. Spiegel’s holdings had dropped to about $1.57 billion by October 2022, when shares were trading at about $7.50 each. Even now, it’s not clear if Snap has fully found its footing since then. The recovery is real, but only in parts. As of April 2026, shares were trading near $5.87, giving the company a market value of about $10.1 billion.
This makes a point that is worth thinking about. Spiegel’s pay, which includes large grants of company stock, has kept coming in even though Snap has been consistently losing money according to GAAP for most of its public life. People who are investors and people who read finance forums and keep a close eye on the stock are really annoyed by this difference. It’s not just a story about a founder getting rich from their work. Many times, the company’s wealth and its ability to make money have gone in opposite directions.
But Spiegel is more than just the stock price. He is on the boards of KKR and Gagosian Gallery, was granted French citizenship in 2018 for cultural contributions, and lives in a home in Brentwood that he bought from Harrison Ford in 2016 for about $12 million. Born in Australia, he married Miranda Kerr in May 2017 and the two of them have three sons.
There is more going on than just a typical billionaire’s foundation when it comes to giving back to the community. Spiegel and Kerr paid off my class’s debt at Otis College of Art and Design in 2022. Spiegel gave $20 million to Stockton Scholars that same year. After the wildfires in Los Angeles in January 2025, he started the Department of Angels with a personal pledge of $15 million. Most recently, in 2026, he and Kerr worked with a nonprofit to forgive $550 million in medical debt for about 261,000 Californians. The actual amount of cash given was many millions of dollars, not the full amount, but the amount of debt forgiveness was real.
When Spiegel’s emails from when he was in a Stanford fraternity became public in 2014, they contained really bad language. This early controversy still comes up when his name is talked about online. At the time, he said sorry and said the emails were stupid. There were no legal consequences. Few people outside of his close circle would know if it changed how he works.
Under the Forbes estimate, Evan Spiegel’s real net worth shows the risk of starting a consumer tech company and putting almost all of your money on its growth. On some days, that risk looks like a great idea. Other days, it looks like a very costly lesson in how quickly stock prices can change the value of a fortune.

