How rich is each member of Queen today?
The fortunes behind the rock legends
With more than 300 million records sold worldwide, Queen remains one of the biggest rock bands of all time. Formed in 1970, the British group has produced some of music's most enduring hits, including Bohemian Rhapsody and We Will Rock You, while their legendary 1985 Live Aid performance is still widely regarded as one of the greatest shows ever staged.
Since Freddie Mercury's death in 1991, the band's legacy has continued through lucrative reissues, touring and various Queen+ incarnations.
Read on to find out how much each core member and Queen+ vocalist is worth, with wealth estimates courtesy of Celebrity Net Worth.
All dollar values in US dollars
Queen's early bass players: no reliable estimates
Before John Deacon completed Queen's classic lineup, three bassists passed through the band. Shown here on the far left, Mike Grose, Roger Taylor's friend from Cornwall, played Queen's first three gigs in 1970 before returning west and later starting his own haulage company. He died in 2019.
Barry Mitchell stayed for around six months before leaving, reportedly amid creative differences. He later released a memoir entitled I'm Not Bitter and now runs a retro sweet shop in Huntingdon. Doug Bogie lasted just two shows in 1971, but remained in the music business. He was signed by Ringo Starr's label, fronted the band RAF and has worked extensively in sound engineering and production.
Paul Rodgers: $14 million (£10.4m)
Paul Rodgers was a rock heavyweight before Queen even entered the picture. He broke through with Free, co-writing and providing the lead vocal for the band's 1970 anthem All Right Now, which became a classic rock staple and major long-term royalty earner.
Rodgers then co-founded Bad Company, the 1970s arena-rock giants behind Can't Get Enough, Shooting Star and Feel Like Makin' Love. He subsequently teamed up with Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page in The Firm and built a solid solo career.
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Paul Rodgers: $14 million (£10.4m)
In 2004, Rodgers stepped into one of rock's most impossible jobs when he joined Brian May and Roger Taylor as the vocalist for Queen + Paul Rodgers.
The choice had a neat full-circle quality: Freddie Mercury was a big fan of Rodgers' voice, but the project was never sold as a Mercury replacement. Instead, Rodgers brought his own blues-rock grit to Queen's catalogue while mixing Free and Bad Company classics into the set.
The collaboration delivered major international tours and the 2008 album The Cosmos Rocks, before ending amicably in 2009.
Adam Lambert: $45 million (£33.5m)
Adam Lambert broke through on American Idol in 2009, finishing runner-up to Kris Allen but quickly becoming one of the show's most successful alumni. His debut album For Your Entertainment reached number three on the Billboard 200, while the hit single Whataya Want from Me earned him a Grammy nomination.
Lambert has since sold more than three million albums and five million singles as a solo artist, while also branching out into stage and screen work.
Adam Lambert: $45 million (£33.5m)
Lambert first performed with Brian May and Roger Taylor during his Idol stint, absolutely wowing the veteran rockers.This led to him becoming Queen's long-term guest frontman after Paul Rodgers' departure. Queen + Adam Lambert played their first full concert in 2012 and have since embarked on several blockbuster world tours.
While Lambert isn't entitled to royalties from Queen's classic back catalogue, performance fees and other touring income have worked wonders on his net worth, which stands at an estimated $45 million (£33.5m). That makes him the third-richest former Idol contestant, after Carrie Underwood and Kelly Clarkson.
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Freddie Mercury: $50 million (£37.2m) at time of his death
On top of being the electrifying frontman, Freddie Mercury chose the band's name and wrote some of Queen's most memorable and lucrative records. He penned their 1974 breakthrough hit Killer Queen, then followed it with classics including Bohemian Rhapsody, Somebody to Love, We Are the Champions and Don't Stop Me Now.
Bohemian Rhapsody became Queen's signature song and the biggest-selling single of the 1970s in the UK. Those credits helped build a fortune that was still generating income long after Mercury's tragically early death.
Freddie Mercury: $50 million (£37.2m) at time of his death
The star's passing in 1991 from complications of AIDS left the music world bereft. At the time of his death, Mercury was worth the equivalent of $50 million (£37.2m) in today's money, according to Celebrity Net Worth. He left most of his estate, including his Kensington home and share of Queen royalties, to his former partner Mary Austin, who became a lifelong confidant after he came out to her in the mid-1970s.
The inheritance has allowed Austin to benefit from Queen's later reissues, the smash-hit Bohemian Rhapsody biopic and the band's record-breaking catalogue sale, not to mention memorabilia sales. According to Celebrity Net Worth, Austin's fortune now stands at a hefty $200 million (£148.7m).
John Deacon: $180 million (£134m)
After Queen's early bass player shuffle, John Deacon joined in 1971 and completed the classic lineup. While less showy than his bandmates, Deacon became a crucial part of what made Queen so unusual: all four classic members wrote major hits. Queen are often cited as the only band in which every member wrote at least one chart-topping single.
Deacon more than held his own, penning You're My Best Friend and I Want to Break Free, while his 1980 smash Another One Bites the Dust became Queen's biggest-selling physical single.
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John Deacon: $180 million (£134m)
Deacon was deeply affected by Freddie Mercury's death and was unable to carry on in the band without him, retiring from music in 1997. Yet he has remained financially tied to Queen, with Brian May saying the band doesn't make major money decisions without consulting him.
That mattered in 2024 when the surviving members and the estate of Freddie Mercury collectively agreed to sell Queen's back catalogue and other rights to Sony for a whopping $1.27 billion (£1bn), obliterating the record for a music rights sale.
Roger Taylor: $250 million (£186.1m)
Roger Taylor co-founded Queen after playing with Brian May in Smile, later becoming the band's powerhouse drummer and falsetto background vocalist.
In keeping with Queen's democratic songwriting ethos, Taylor penned several major hits for the group, including Radio Ga Ga and A Kind of Magic. He was also the main writer of These Are the Days of Our Lives and co-wrote smash singles including Innuendo and Under Pressure.
Radio Ga Ga became one of Queen's defining 1980s anthems and later inspired Stefani Germanotta's Lady Gaga stage name.
Roger Taylor: $250 million (£186.1m)
Taylor has also forged a career beyond Queen, launching solo records from the late 1970s onwards and forming his own band The Cross in the 1980s. After Freddie Mercury's death, he remained one of the driving forces keeping Queen active, later touring with Paul Rodgers and Adam Lambert alongside Brian May.
Taylor's wealth has been boosted by decades of album sales, songwriting royalties, touring, property and Queen's continuing commercial power, culminating in the band's billion-dollar catalogue sale in 2024.
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Brian May: $260 million (£193.6m)
Queen co-founder and lead guitarist Brian May is one of rock's most recognisable musicians. Armed with his homemade Red Special guitar, May wrote Queen's very first single Keep Yourself Alive, then went on to pen some of the group's biggest crowd-pleasers, including We Will Rock You, I Want It All, Who Wants to Live Forever, The Show Must Go On and Flash.
Those writing credits, combined with Queen's colossal record sales, have made him very rich indeed.
Brian May: $260 million (£193.6m)
May's fortune is matched by an unusually wide-ranging CV. Away from Queen, he has released solo material, completed a PhD in astrophysics and become a prominent animal rights campaigner. In 2023, the rock legend was knighted for services to music and charity, cementing his national treasure status.
May has remained central to Queen's modern business, from reissues and the Bohemian Rhapsody biopic to the band's lucrative live revival with Adam Lambert. Celebrity Net Worth estimates May's fortune at $260 million (£193.6m), a figure considerably bolstered by Queen's landmark catalogue sale in 2024.
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