Richest women in America
The overwhelming majority of those who make it onto "richest people" lists—in all 50 states or the world—are men. This fact is unsurprising, considering the history of discriminatory workplace practices and various barriers to women's wealth, including barring women from having credit cards until the 1970s. Even in 2025, an income gap left women earning $0.83 on average for every $1 a man makes.
Madam C.J. Walker, an early 20th-century purveyor of hair care and cosmetics for Black women, is widely considered the first woman self-made millionaire in the United States. But the glass ceiling still hasn't been shattered more than a century later. In 2016, Gabriel Zucman, an economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley, told The New York Times that "the higher up you move in the income distribution, the lower the proportion of women … [which] shows that there is a fundamental form of inequality at the top related to gender."
That inequality may finally end in the coming years, however, or at least shift in the right direction. According to an August 2024 Fortune report, women will soon control the majority of personal wealth, which is expected to reach $30 trillion within the next 10 years. And considering many wealthy women like Melinda French Gates spend their money on philanthropic and charitable causes, those trillions could go in unexpected directions.
For now, though, Stacker compiled a list of the 15 richest women in America, using data from Forbes. These wealthy women are ranked by their net worth as of February 2026. The women on the list have come upon their fortunes in various ways. Among them are heiresses like the Waltons, who inherited wealth created by their families' businesses. Others built businesses with their husbands, like MacKenzie Scott of Amazon. Regardless of how these women came into their fortunes, their economic impact is undeniable.
Keep reading to see how many names you recognize.
#15. Laurene Powell Jobs
- Net worth: $14.1 billion
- Worldwide rank: 196
- Source of wealth: Apple, Disney
Laurene Powell Jobs met her late husband, Apple founder Steve Jobs, after he gave a guest lecture at Stanford University, where she was an MBA student. When he died in 2011, Laurene inherited billions of dollars in Apple and Disney stocks. Owner of The Atlantic since 2017, she received praise in March 2025 as the "quiet superhero" behind the Signalgate scandal, in which the publication revealed that editor Jeffrey Goldberg had received private messages related to top-secret war plans. In December 2025, she divested her stake in Monumental Sports & Entertainment. In 2021, she launched the Waverley Street Foundation and committed to donate $3 billion over a decade to organizations addressing climate change.
#14. Ann Walton Kroenke
- Net worth: $14.8 billion
- Worldwide rank: 183
- Source of wealth: Walmart
Ann Walton Kroenke, a registered nurse, is not at all involved in operating Walmart, her family's business. While she did inherit billions of dollars in shares upon the death of her father, Bud Walton, she and her husband chose to use their combined billions to purchase numerous sports teams: the Los Angeles Rams, the Denver Nuggets, the Colorado Avalanche, the Colorado Rapids, and the Arsenal Football Club.
#13. Nancy Walton Laurie
- Net worth: $20.4 billion
- Worldwide rank: 119
- Source of wealth: Walmart
One of several Walmart heirs on this list, Nancy Walton Laurie, inherited enough company stock from her father, Bud Walton, to make her a billionaire. Walton Laurie and her husband, Bill Laurie, owned Missouri's Providence Bank until they sold it in 2021. Besides her business interests, in 1998, she founded the Columbia Performing Arts Centre in Columbia, Missouri, and continues to be deeply invested in the center's success. Like so many billionaires, Walton Laurie has come under fire for her lavish lifestyle, most recently after a June 2025 report about her $300 million yacht.
#12. Diane Hendricks
- Net worth: $22.3 billion
- Worldwide rank: 107
- Source of wealth: Building supplies
As a child, Diane Hendricks spent her days on a dairy farm. Once married, she and her husband, Ken Hendricks, founded ABC Supply, one of the largest wholesale distributors of roofing, siding and windows in the country. Hendricks has run the company solo since her husband died in 2007, donating millions of dollars to nonprofits in her home state of Wisconsin every year. The company has over 900 branch locations and had $20.7 billion in 2024 revenues. In July 2025, she began starring on the new A&E show "Betting on Beloit" alongside her daughter, Konya Hendricks Schuh. She remains the richest self-made woman in America for the eighth consecutive year.
#11. Christy Walton
- Net worth: $24.7 billion
- Worldwide rank: 93
- Source of wealth: Walmart
When Christy Walton's husband John died in 2005, she inherited one-sixth of his Walmart fortune. In 2010, she established the venture capital firm Cuna del Mar, which fights for sustainable seafood supply chains by backing brands like Earth Ocean Farms and Sol Azul Maricultivos. In March 2025, Walton placed a full-page ad in The New York Times critiquing President Donald Trump's administration. In April 2025, she helped fund the Vaccine Integrity Project to protect safe vaccine use in the U.S. She was one of the biggest backers of the Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump super-PAC. She leads a very private life in Jackson, Wyoming.
#10. MacKenzie Scott
- Net worth: $28.5 billion
- Worldwide rank: 77
- Source of wealth: Amazon
MacKenzie Scott, the ex-wife of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, signed the Giving Pledge in 2019, committing to donate most of her wealth to philanthropic causes. Scott was awarded a 4% share of the online retailer Amazon upon the finalization of her divorce from Bezos in 2019. As of December 2025, Scott has donated $19.3 billion to more than 2,500 nonprofits through her philanthropic platform, Yield Giving. Her charitable efforts got renewed attention in June 2025, offering a stark contrast to Bezos' opulent wedding to new wife, Lauren Sánchez. In late 2025, she became America's third most generous philanthropist of all time, behind only Warren Buffett and Bill Gates.
#9. Lyndal Stephens Greth and family
- Net worth: $29.2 billion
- Worldwide rank: 74
- Source of wealth: Oil & gas
Lyndal Stephens Greth's father, Autry Stephens, founded the Texas-based oil firm Endeavor Energy Resources in 1979. Before he passed away in 2024, Autry negotiated the $26 billion sale of Endeavor Energy Resources to Diamondback Energy. As a result, Greth now owns more than a third of Diamondback's shares.
#8. Melinda French Gates
- Net worth: $29.9 billion
- Worldwide rank: 73
- Source of wealth: Microsoft, investments
A former high-level employee at Microsoft Corporation, Melinda French Gates, founded the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in 2000 with her then-husband, Bill Gates. In 2021, Melinda French Gates became a billionaire in her own right after Bill Gates transferred $2.4 billion worth of stock to her amid their divorce proceedings. In 2024, Melinda resigned from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to focus on Pivotal Ventures, her venture capital firm that invests in woman-owned businesses. Forbes estimates her settlement from the 2021 divorce was $25 billion. In January 2026, Bill Gates donated another $2 billion to her foundations, bringing his total contributions to $10.8 billion.
#7. Elaine Marshall and family
- Net worth: $30.9 billion
- Worldwide rank: 68
- Source of wealth: Koch Inc.
The daughter-in-law of businessman J. Howard Marshall II, Elaine Marshall, and her two sons inherited a sizable stake in the corporation Koch, Inc. after Elaine's husband died in 2006. She and her sons still retain an estimated 16% of Koch, Inc. today. Elaine has also served as North Carolina's Secretary of State since 1997, winning her reelection bid in November 2024. Her son E. Pierce Marshall Jr. runs investment firm Élevage Capital Management.
#6. Marilyn Simons and family
- Net worth: $32.5 billion
- Worldwide rank: 63
- Source of wealth: Hedge funds
Marilyn Simons was married to hedge fund manager and investor Jim Simons until his death in 2024, at which point she inherited his approximately $31 billion net worth. She and Jim had long been active philanthropists, gifting hundreds of millions of dollars to educational initiatives via the Simons Foundation. Launched in 1994 and still chaired by Marilyn, this nonprofit is worth $4.5 billion as of 2025.
#5. Abigail Johnson
- Net worth: $33.9 billion
- Worldwide rank: 61
- Source of wealth: Fidelity
Abigail Johnson has served as the CEO of Fidelity Investments since 2014 and as chairman since 2016. Her grandfather, Edward Johnson II, founded the Boston-based mutual fund giant in 1946. She owns an estimated 29% stake in the firm, which as of March 2025 manages discretionary assets totaling $5.9 trillion. Johnson has embraced cryptocurrencies, and in 2018, Fidelity launched a platform allowing institutional investors to custody and trade bitcoin, ether, and litecoin. The Johnson family has frequently contributed to Boston-area nonprofits, with donations going to Harvard, Historic New England, and the Institute of Contemporary Art.
#4. Miriam Adelson and family
- Net worth: $37.9 billion
- Worldwide rank: 54
- Source of wealth: Casinos
An Israeli-American physician who focuses on addiction, Miriam Adelson is the widow of Sheldon Adelson, the founder of the Las Vegas Sands casino company. Upon Sheldon Adelson's death in 2021, she became the primary owner of the company. Adelson is a dedicated philanthropist who focuses much of her attention on the Dr. Miriam & Sheldon G. Adelson Clinic for Drug Abuse Treatment & Research, which helps treat people with opioid use disorder. In late 2023, she bought a majority stake in the Dallas Mavericks NBA team from Mark Cuban. She's also a prominent backer of President Donald Trump and donated more than $90 million to his 2024 campaign.
#3. Jacqueline Mars
- Net worth: $45.8 billion
- Worldwide rank: 38
- Source of wealth: Candy, pet food
Jacqueline Mars is the great-aunt of the four Mars sisters highlighted in the larger Forbes list. She owns an estimated one-third of her grandfather's candy company and worked for it for nearly 20 years, serving on the board until 2016. Her son Stephen Badger is on Mars' board of directors. Mars serves on the board of the National Archives and was formerly on the board of the Washington National Opera.
#2. Julia Koch and family
- Net worth: $81.1 billion
- Worldwide rank: 22
- Source of wealth: Koch, Inc.
Julia Koch inherited a 42% stake in Koch, Inc. when her husband, David Koch, died in 2019. The duo met on a blind date in 1991 and married in 1996. The former fashion assistant and her late husband have donated $10 million to Mount Sinai Medical Center and Stanford University's Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, respectively. In June 2024, Koch and her three children paid nearly $700 million for 15% of BSE Global, which owns the NBA's Brooklyn Nets and WNBA's New York Liberty. In September 2025, she struck a deal to buy a minority stake in the New York Giants NFL team.
#1. Alice Walton
- Net worth: $137 billion
- Worldwide rank: 13
- Source of wealth: Walmart
The only daughter of Walmart founder Sam Walton, Alice Walton inherited a huge portion of the company upon her father's death in 1992. A member of the richest nonroyal family in the world, Walton has spent very little time working for the family business, instead focusing on curating artwork. In 2011, she opened her own art museum in Arkansas—the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art—which features works from greats like Warhol, Rockwell and Rothko. In July 2025, Walton welcomed the inaugural class of students to the Alice L. Walton School of Medicine in Bentonville, Arkansas, after spending at least $250 million on the project. In September 2025, she became the first American woman to reach a $100 billion net worth.
Story editing by Cu Fleshman and Louis Peitzman. Copy editing by Paris Close.