How these music artists built their billion-dollar fortunes
Becoming a billionaire in the music industry is incredibly rare, but a select group of artists have managed to use their fame to amass massive fortunes. Dr. Dre is the latest name to be added to the list: The hip-hop icon, born Andre Young, recently joined the Forbes Billionaires list, cementing his place alongside industry giants. Young went from being a founding member of the hip-hop group NWA to producing legends like Eminem and 50 Cent, laying the foundation for his success, although it was his business moves that truly changed the game. Co-founding Beats Electronics and later selling it to Apple for $3 billion proved to be a turning point. He even once proudly told Forbes, “I don’t chase money, I try to make the money chase me.” Dre now joins Jay-Z as only the second hip-hop billionaire on Forbes’ list. Jay-Z built a $2.5 billion empire through ventures like Roc Nation, luxury champagne, and investments in companies like Uber. Then there’s Rihanna, whose fortune largely stems from her Fenty Beauty brand, which she launched in 2017. The brand is widely credited with reshaping the beauty industry by setting a new standard for inclusivity, offering an unprecedented 40 foundation shades at launch and pushing competitors to expand their ranges while embracing more authentic representation. Others have taken different paths. Taylor Swift became a billionaire largely through music itself, driven by the massive success of her record-breaking Eras Tour, which generated over $2 billion in ticket sales worldwide. On top of that, in May 2025, she announced she had repurchased her recordings from Shamrock Capital, the private equity firm that had acquired them from Scooter Braun in 2020.
2026-04-09T11:57:08Z