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Just been reading about Elon's compensation package and the numbers are genuinely wild. So basically, his total salary for 2025 comes out to around $87.75 billion according to Tesla's latest proxy filing. That breaks down to roughly $7.3 billion per month if you're thinking in monthly salary terms, though obviously it doesn't work like a normal paycheck.
Here's the thing that's interesting - Musk doesn't actually get paid like a regular CEO. His whole compensation structure is performance-based, locked in back in 2018. It's all tied to hitting specific milestones for Tesla. So that $87.75 billion figure? That's contingent on him actually delivering results.
But wait, there's more. The Tesla board proposed this absolutely massive additional package that could add another $900 billion over the next decade. The catch is he needs to pull off some pretty ambitious targets: push Tesla's valuation from the current $1.1 trillion all the way to $8.5 trillion, plus deliver a million robots and a million Robotaxis within ten years. If he actually manages that, we're looking at wealth that's never been accumulated by a single person before.
What's wild is that even with his current net worth hovering around $430 billion, the market swings have been brutal. Tesla stock got hammered in early 2025 partly due to various controversies, which directly impacted his wealth. That's the thing about being this wealthy - your net worth isn't stable like a salary. It moves with stock prices and valuations.
The compensation structure itself is pretty clever from a shareholder perspective. Instead of just handing him cash, they're essentially saying 'hit these growth targets and you earn it.' Makes you wonder if we'll actually see someone cross that trillion-dollar threshold in our lifetime. If anyone's positioned to do it, it's probably him.