Dr. Dre has finally joined the billionaire boys club.
The legendary hip-hop producer/mogul is one of almost 3,500 figures who are featured on Forbes‘ 2026 Billionaires List, ranking as the 3,332nd richest person on the planet — tied with Rihanna, Jared Kushner and DoorDash co-founder Stanley Tang, among others.
According to the publication, Dre’s billion-dollar net worth is “derived mostly from the Aftermath Entertainment record label and Beats Electronics,” which he cofounded in 1996 and 2006, respectively.
The 61-year-old is one of two rappers who can currently claim to be a billionaire along with JAY-Z, who boasts an enormous $2.8 billion fortune, placing him 1,504th on Forbes‘ rich list.
Kanye West and Diddy also became billionaires over the last decade, according to various reports, until controversies left a major dent in their respective net worths.
Beyond hip-hop, Dre is only the sixth musician to reach the 10-figure milestone, joining the aforementioned JAY-Z and Rihanna as well as Beyoncé, Taylor Swift and Bruce Springsteen.
Topping Forbes‘ 2026 Billionaires List by a considerable margin is Elon Musk, whose ownership stakes in Tesla, SpaceX and xAI has seen his wealth soar to a staggering $839 billion.
Dr. Dre’s inclusion on the rich list comes more than a decade after he inaccurately claimed to have become hip-hop’s first billionaire following the $3 billion sale of Beats Electronics to Apple in 2014.
Shortly before the deal was officially announced, the N.W.A icon appeared in a social media video with Tyrese and bragged that he was now “the first billionaire in hip-hop, right here from the muthafucking West Coast.”
However, reports at the time indicated that the deal had actually pushed Dre’s net worth to $800 million, up from $550 million, leaving him a couple hundred million short of the billion-dollar mark.
It was later claimed in the book After Steve: How Apple Became a Trillion-Dollar Company and Lost Its Soul that the aforementioned video cost Dre and fellow Beats cofounder Jimmy Iovine around $200 million after Apple boss Tim Cook used the leak as leverage to reduce the acquisition price.