Richest self-made women in America
After several decades of major strides in the American workforce, the number of women in corporate leadership positions or running their own companies has exploded. There are more self-made women millionaires and billionaires today than ever, despite a gender wage gap that in 2024 means women earn $0.84 for every $1 a man makes.
In early 2024, there were more than 14 million businesses owned by women, according to a report from Wells Fargo. Women-owned businesses had nearly $2.7 trillion in revenue and almost 12.2 million employees.
To see which women have built the most wealth on their own, Stacker collected data from Hurun Research Institute's 2023 report on the world's self-made women billionaires. The sum of the wealth of all women on the list is $91.4 billion—less than a third of Elon Musk's net wealth of $254.5 billion.
Wealth is as of July 16, 2024. "Self-made" in this context means wealth that was not inherited. It doesn't take into account whether inherited wealth or privilege helped in the creation of independent wealth. Please note: The data source presumed a binary gender classification.
#21. Neerja Sethi
- Wealth: $1 billion
- Primary company: Syntel
- Primary industry: Enterprise software
Neerja Sethi co-founded the information technology consulting and outsourcing company Syntel in the 1980s. The French IT firm Atos SE bought Syntel in 2018 for $3.4 billion. Sethi received $510 million for her stake, which went a long way in bumping up her net worth.
#19. Michelle Zatlyn (tie)
- Wealth: $1.1 billion
- Primary company: Cloudflare
- Primary industry: Cybersecurity
Before being the co-founder and COO of cybersecurity firm Cloudflare, Michelle Zatlyn held leadership positions at Google and Toshiba and launched two successful startups. She earned an MBA from Harvard Business School and was awarded the Dubliner Prize for Entrepreneurship.
#19. Zhang Xin (tie)
- Wealth: $1.1 billion
- Primary company: SOHO China
- Primary industry: Estate holding
Zhang Xin co-founded the real estate company SOHO China with her husband. Before working at SOHO China, she cut her teeth at firms such as Goldman Sachs and Travelers Group. Though Zhang and her husband stepped down from their leadership roles at SOHO China in 2022, they remain on the company's board.
#18. Rihanna
- Wealth: $1.4 billion
- Primary company: Music
- Primary industry: Music
Robyn Rihanna Fenty may be a global pop superstar, but the real origins of her wealth come from her beauty company, Fenty Beauty, which launched in 2017. The company alone quickly catapulted Rihanna's net worth into another stratosphere. The cosmetics brand is known for creating makeup shades for a wider range of skin tones than other beauty companies offer.
#17. Doris Fisher
- Wealth: $1.5 billion
- Primary company: GAP
- Primary industry: Apparel & textile products
Doris Fisher co-founded the ubiquitous American clothing retailer Gap, Inc. Fisher founded the brand with her husband when they struggled to find jeans that fit him, following many owners' pattern of founding companies in response to a need in their own life. Fisher is also a co-founder and major supporter of the Knowledge is Power Program Foundation, which supports public charter schools. In 2024, Fisher sold the majority of her family's Atherton, California estate for nearly $48 million.
#16. Kim Kardashian
- Wealth: $1.7 billion
- Primary company: KKW Beauty
- Primary industry: Personal care
Kim Kardashian became a household name thanks to her family's hit TV series "Keeping Up with the Kardashians." But the reality TV star made her real fortune by branching out into personal care products. The superstar's SKKN beauty line—formerly known as KKW—was prompted by Kardashian's self-described desire to give people at-home access to dermatologist-quality skincare without a doctor's office visit.
#14. Elaine Wynn (tie)
- Wealth: $2 billion
- Primary company: Wynn Resort
- Primary industry: Casino
Elaine Wynn co-founded her family's eponymous resort and casino business, Wynn Resorts. The Las Vegas doyenne is an avid art collector and has partnered with the Los Angeles County Museum of Art to found Sin City's first art museum, which was approved in December 2023. She told the Wall Street Journal that the price of her 2013 purchase of a Francis Bacon triptych—at $142.4 million, then the most expensive art piece sold at auction—spurred speculation that offended her: Claims a man must have purchased the paintings.
#14. Safra Catz (tie)
- Wealth: $2 billion
- Primary company: Oracle
- Primary industry: Enterprise software
Safra Catz has been the CEO of Oracle since 2014 and has sat on the board of directors since 2001. In addition to her duties at the software and services company, Catz's net worth also comes from her position as a director of The Walt Disney Company.
#12. Alice N. Schwartz (tie)
- Wealth: $2.1 billion
- Primary company: Bio-Rad Laboratories
- Primary industry: Pharmaceuticals
Alice Schwartz met her husband, David, while studying for her biochemistry degree at the University of California, Berkeley. They started Bio-Rad Laboratories in a Berkeley Quonset hut in 1952 with $720 and eventually expanded into biological discovery and health care research. She worked as a researcher and member of the board of directors. She stepped down from her board duties in 2022 at age 96. Her son, Norman Schwartz, is now president and CEO of the company.
#12. Sheryl Sandberg (tie)
- Wealth: $2.1 billion
- Primary company: Facebook
- Primary industry: Media
Sheryl Sandberg may be best known for writing the controversial bestseller "Lean In," which advised women to take charge of their own careers and destinies. Still, Sandberg's fortune didn't come from book sales but from her early involvement and decades of experience as COO of the social networking giant Facebook. She stepped down from the position in June 2022 and departed the company's board in May 2024.
#11. Peggy Cherng
- Wealth: $2.9 billion
- Primary company: Panda Express
- Primary industry: Restaurants
Peggy Cherng is the co-founder of the Chinese fast-food company Panda Express. The company boasts more than 2,300 locations worldwide and $3 billion in sales. In recent years, Cherng has also made philanthropic efforts, like donating millions to City of Hope cancer center and the University of Missouri's scholarship program.
#10. Oprah Winfrey
- Wealth: $3 billion
- Primary company: Oprah Winfrey Network
- Primary industry: Entertainment
Oprah Winfrey's eponymous "The Oprah Winfrey Show" made her a household name from 1986 until its final episode in 2011. She went on to found her TV network, Oprah Winfrey Network, which is the source of most of her wealth today.
#9. Meg Whitman
- Wealth: $3.4 billion
- Primary company: eBay
- Primary industry: E-commerce
Meg Whitman spent a decade at the helm of e-commerce pioneer eBay. During Whitman's tenure as CEO between 1998 and 2008, she grew the company from $5.7 billion to $8 billion in sales. She was subsequently the CEO of Hewlett-Packard, where she oversaw the company's split into two entities. Since 2022, Whitman has served as the U.S. Ambassador to Kenya.
#7. Jayshree Ullal (tie)
- Wealth: $4.4 billion
- Primary company: Arista Networks
- Primary industry: Networking solutions
Jayshree Ullal has served as president and CEO of the computer networking firm Arista since 2008. She owns about 3% of Arista's stock, which contributes significantly to her net worth. Ullal also sits on the board of Snowflake, a public cloud computing company.
#7. Gail Miller (tie)
- Wealth: $4.4 billion
- Primary company: Larry H. Miller
- Primary industry: Automobiles
Gail Miller is the owner and chair of Larry H. Miller. The group of companies has held, at various points, sports teams, vast automotive dealings, and more. Miller is now focused on health care, among other industries she sees as the focus on the future.
#6. Johnelle Hunt
- Wealth: $4.5 billion
- Primary company: JB Hunt Transport Services
- Primary industry: Logistics
Johnelle Hunt may be one of the richest women in the world today, but it wasn't always this way for her. Hunt and her husband had to sell their home and take out loans to start their rice trucking business decades ago. Today, that company has evolved into a multibillion-dollar empire, of which Hunt is the largest individual shareholder.
#5. Lynda Resnick
- Wealth: $5.6 billion
- Primary company: Roll International
- Primary industry: Food processing
Lynda Resnick is vice-chair and co-owner of The Wonderful Company, best known for distributing various health food products, including pistachios and seedless lemons. Known for her marketing prowess, Resnick was nicknamed "POM Queen" after making the company's POM Wonderful Pomegranate Juice a wild success.
#4. Judy Faulkner
- Wealth: $7.8 billion
- Primary company: Epic Systems
- Primary industry: Health care
Judy Faulkner founded health care software company Epic Systems in 1979 in a Wisconsin basement. It is now the largest company of its kind in the U.S. As the CEO, Faulkner owns 47% of the multibillion-dollar company.
#3. Jami Gertz
- Wealth: $8 billion
- Primary company: Movies
- Primary industry: Acting
The actor was discovered at age 16 in a talent search for the sitcom "Square Pegs" with Sarah Jessica Parker, which aired in the early 1980s. Since then, she has appeared in numerous television shows, among them the NBC hit "This Is Us," "The Neighbors," and "Modern Family" on ABC. She also starred on the cable series "Entourage" and the comedy "Still Standing" for four seasons. Onscreen, she co-starred in "The Lost Boys" and appeared in "Less Than Zero." She and her husband, billionaire investor Anthony Ressler, own the Atlanta Hawks NBA team and are noted philanthropists through their Ressler Gertz Family Foundation.
#2. Judy Love
- Wealth: $11.6 billion
- Primary company: Love's Travel Stops & Country Stores
- Primary industry: Multibrand retail
Far from the modern world of technology and Silicon Valley, Judy Love's empire began with a humble gas station. She and her husband took out a $5,000 loan to open their first gas station in the 1960s. Today, that business has expanded to almost every state in America and does more than $25 billion in annual sales.
#1. Diane Hendricks
- Wealth: $20.9 billion
- Primary company: ABC Supply
- Primary industry: Construction materials
Diane Hendricks made her fortune in construction at ABC Supply. But today, the billionaire has turned her attention to post-industrial towns she believes she can revitalize. One of them is Beloit, a Wisconsin town that has fallen on hard times in recent years, which Hendricks hopes can be transformed into a magnet for startups and founders.
Data reporting by Paxtyn Merten. Story editing by Jeff Inglis. Copy editing by Paris Close. Photo selection by Clarese Moller.