Veritable tycoon factories, an elite tier of businesses has proven remarkably effective at generating extreme wealth. Private old-money empires rule the roost, spawning vast family fortunes that have endured for generations.
But public tech giants and AI upstarts have also created huge numbers of ultra-rich individuals, delivering spectacular paydays for visionary founders and pivotal early insiders.
So which companies lead the billionaire head count? Click or scroll on to find out.
All dollar values in US dollars
Counting which companies have produced the most billionaires isn't all that straightforward. This gallery is based mainly on the latest Forbes billionaire rankings. But Forbes doesn't always count large family fortunes the same way.
Some heirs are listed individually, while others such as LVMH's Bernard Arnault and his heirs appear together under a single '& family' entry, which can affect how many billionaires are linked to a particular company.
Other wealth trackers such as Bloomberg and Hurun apply different methods, meaning totals can vary.
One of two AI powerhouses in this round-up, Anthropic has produced seven billionaire co-founders in just a few years. The artificial intelligence firm behind the Claude chatbot was founded in 2021 by former OpenAI researchers and is led by a brother-and-sister duo, CEO Dario Amodei and president Daniela Amodei.
The startup's meteoric rise has supercharged the wealth of its founding team. Each of the seven co-founders owns around 2% of the company, meaning Anthropic's soaring valuation has pushed their individual fortunes to roughly $7 billion (£5.2bn) apiece.
The world's largest company by revenue has also produced the richest dynasty on Earth. Around 45% of Walmart's stock is still controlled by the family of founder Sam Walton and his brother Bud Walton, leaving seven heirs on the billionaire list.
Bloomberg pegged the clan's wealth at $513.4 billion (£382.6bn) in 2025, while Forbes put the total closer to $267 billion (£199.2bn) a year earlier.
The wealthiest members are Sam's three surviving children. Rob is tops with $142.2 billion (£106.1bn), followed by Jim, who has $139.5 billion (£104.1bn), and their sister Alice, whose $130.4 billion (£97.3bn) fortune makes her the planet's richest woman.
The world's number one cleaning products dynasty, this Wisconsin-based empire has been privately held by the Johnson family for five generations.
While the core fortune is currently concentrated among the four primary siblings, the company has historically minted at least seven individual billionaires. They've included the late matriarch Imogene Powers Johnson and extended family scions like Karen Johnson Boyd.
The current richest is Helen Johnson-Leipold, who heads Johnson Outdoors. Her net worth stands at $4.9 billion (£3.7bn). Pictured is H Fisk Johnson, the overall company chairman and CEO.
Mobile advertising firm AppLovin has birthed eight billionaires since it was founded in 2012. The company operates one of the world’s largest platforms for marketing and monetising mobile apps, particularly games.
Its rapid growth and soaring share price since its 2021 stock market debut have generated enormous wealth for the founders Adam Foroughi (pictured), Andrew Karam and John Krystynak, with Foroughi the richest with a net worth of $18.2 billion (£13.6bn). The firm's other billionaires consist of early executives and investors.
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Eight members of the Braun clan have become billionaires thanks to their stakes in the namesake German medical technology colossus.
The heirs come from two branches of the dynasty: five children of longtime chairman Ludwig Georg Braun and three cousins from the Braun-Luedicke side of the family. The wealthiest is Ludwig's eldest son Otto Philipp Braunn (pictured), who holds the largest stake at around 23% and has an estimated net worth of $4 billion (£3bn).
Founded in 1839, the privately-held family firm has grown into one of the world’s largest makers of medical devices, supplying hospitals with everything from surgical instruments to infusion systems.
Staying with German dynasties, the eight children of Rudolf August Oetker all became billionaires after inheriting stakes in the family's food and consumer goods empire when he died in 2007. Ownership of Dr August Oetker KG was divided equally among the siblings, giving each 12.5% of the conglomerate.
The billionaire heirs include Richard (pictured), Christian, August and Alfred Oetker, along with Rosely Schweizer, Bergit Douglas, Julia Oetker and Carl Ferdinand Oetker. The clan's fortune stems from a business founded in 1891 selling baking powder that later expanded into foods, drinks, chemicals, shipping and luxury hotels.
Social media behemoth Meta has created eight billionaires since Mark Zuckerberg co-founded Facebook in 2004 with a group of Harvard roommates. Among them are early partners Eduardo Saverin and Dustin Moskovitz, along with influential early backers Peter Thiel, Jim Breyer and Jeff Rothschild, former president Sean Parker and erstwhile COO Sheryl Sandberg.
The runaway richest is Zuckerberg himself of course. Currently worth $221.2 billion (£165bn), he ranks among the five wealthiest people on the planet, far ahead of the other fortunes tied to the company.
Ten billionaires have emerged from Google parent Alphabet.
The list is led by co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin (pictured), who launched the search engine in 1998 from a garage in California. They're the richest of the bunch with Page worth $246.8 billion (£184.1bn) and Brin $227.8 billion (£169.9bn), which makes them the second and third-richest individuals in the world.
Early investors and executives also struck it ultra-rich, including Sun Microsystems co-founder Andreas von Bechtolsheim, venture capitalist John Doerr and former Google CEO Eric Schmidt.
The scions of this family-owned Swiss pharmaceutical giant epitomise discreet old money. While Forbes lists only heiress Maja Oeri individually, Bloomberg and Swiss data reveal the fortune actually supports at least 12 billionaires across the Hoffmann and Oeri families.
Bound by a complex 1948 voting pool, heirs like André Hoffmann and Andreas Oeri collectively control a 45% stake worth many tens of billions of dollars.
Hotel giant Hyatt has turned 13 members of the Pritzker family into billionaires. The Chicago dynasty's fortune dates back to 1957, when entrepreneur Jay Pritzker bought the first Hyatt House motel in Los Angeles and built it into a global hospitality empire.
The richest heir today is Karen Pritzker, who is worth a tidy $7 billion (£5.2bn). Her wealth is boosted by investments in the likes of Apple and numerous biotech firms.
Other notable family billionaires include Illinois governor J B Pritzker (pictured), investor Jennifer Pritzker and Thomas Pritzker, who stepped down as Hyatt’s executive chairman amid scrutiny over his past relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.
Agribusiness juggernaut Cargill has produced more billionaires than any other company. The extensive Cargill-MacMillan clan, which still controls the privately held firm, counts 21 three-comma heirs, according to Forbes.
The business was founded in Iowa in 1865 by patriarch W W Cargill as a single grain storage warehouse. Cargill is now America's largest private company, spanning global trading in crops, food ingredients, meat and energy.
The richest family member is Pauline MacMillan Keinath, the company's largest individual shareholder with roughly a 13% stake and a fortune of $9.5 billion (£7.1bn). Pictured is scion Martha MacMillan, who is worth $1.7 billion (£1.3bn).
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