Becoming a billionaire young is rare. Becoming one through startups and technology without inheritance is even rarer.
In 2026, the U.S. continues to dominate the list of young, self-made tech billionaires. Canada, while strong in innovation, produces fewer billionaires early due to a smaller venture market, later exits, and fewer mega-IPOs. That reality matters—and this list reflects it honestly.
Below are the Top 5 Young Billionaires in Canada and Top 5 in the U.S., based on Forbes, Bloomberg, company filings, and public disclosures, focusing on founders who built real companies, not inherited fortunes.
🇨🇦 Top 5 Young Billionaires in Canada (2026)
Note: “Young” here reflects founders under ~50, because Canada has very few under-40 self-made billionaires. That constraint itself tells an important story about capital scale and exits in Canada.
1. Tobias Lütke
- Age: 48
- Net Worth: ~$9–10B
- Company: Shopify
- Industry: E-commerce / SaaS
- Founded: 2006
- How He Made His Money: Equity ownership in Shopify
- Summary:
Tobias Lütke built Shopify into one of the world’s most important commerce infrastructure companies, powering millions of merchants globally. Unlike consumer apps, Shopify monetizes through subscriptions, payments, logistics, and merchant services—creating durable, diversified revenue. Lütke represents Canada’s strongest example of global-scale tech wealth creation.
2. Garrett Camp
- Age: 46
- Net Worth: ~$4–5B
- Company: Uber (Co-founder), Expa
- Industry: Mobility / Venture Studio
- Founded: Uber (2009), Expa (2013)
- How He Made His Money: Uber equity + startup investments
- Summary:
Before Uber became a transportation giant, Garrett Camp helped invent the modern ride-sharing model. Post-Uber, he founded Expa, a startup studio backing early-stage tech companies. Camp’s wealth comes from foundational platform creation, not late-stage financial engineering.
3. Ryan Cohen
- Age: 40
- Net Worth: ~$3–4B
- Company: Chewy, GameStop (Chairman)
- Industry: E-commerce / Activist Investing
- Founded: Chewy (2011)
- How He Made His Money: Chewy exit + equity investments
- Summary:
Ryan Cohen built Chewy into a category-defining pet e-commerce company and sold it for $3.35B. He later emerged as a controversial but influential activist investor, reshaping GameStop’s board and strategy. His wealth reflects founder-led exits followed by concentrated equity bets.
4. Ivan Zhao
- Age: 32
- Net Worth: ~$1–2B (private estimates)
- Company: Notion
- Industry: Productivity / SaaS
- Founded: 2016
- How He Made His Money: Founder equity in Notion
- Summary:
Notion became one of the most loved productivity platforms globally, with a cult-like user base and strong enterprise expansion. Zhao’s wealth is largely paper wealth but significant, reflecting how capital-efficient SaaS products can scale without massive headcount or burn.
5. Anthony Lacavera
- Age: 49
- Net Worth: ~$1.5B
- Company: Globalive, WIND Mobile (Freedom Mobile)
- Industry: Telecommunications / Private Equity
- Founded: WIND Mobile (2008)
- How He Made His Money: Telecom exits + investments
- Summary:
Lacavera disrupted Canada’s telecom oligopoly by launching WIND Mobile, later sold to Shaw. His wealth stems from regulatory arbitrage, infrastructure plays, and persistence in a notoriously closed Canadian market.
🇺🇸 Top 5 Young Billionaires in the United States (2026)
The U.S. ecosystem consistently creates younger billionaires due to deeper venture capital, larger markets, and faster exits.
1. Alexandr Wang
- Age: 28
- Net Worth: ~$3–4B
- Company: Scale AI
- Industry: Artificial Intelligence / Data Infrastructure
- Founded: 2016
- How He Made His Money: Founder equity
- Summary:
Alexandr Wang built Scale AI into critical infrastructure for training frontier AI models. As AI spending exploded, Scale became indispensable to governments and Big Tech. Wang is widely considered one of the most important figures behind the AI boom—without being a model builder himself.
2. Lucy Guo
- Age: 31
- Net Worth: ~$1.2–1.5B
- Company: Scale AI (co-founder), Passes
- Industry: AI / Creator Economy
- Founded: Scale AI (2016), Passes (2022)
- How She Made Her Money: Early Scale AI equity
- Summary:
Guo’s billionaire status comes primarily from her retained stake in Scale AI. She later founded Passes, targeting monetization tools for creators. Her story highlights how early equity in infrastructure startups can outperform later-stage operating roles.
3. Evan Spiegel
- Age: 35
- Net Worth: ~$2–3B
- Company: Snap Inc.
- Industry: Social Media / AR
- Founded: 2011
- How He Made His Money: Founder equity
- Summary:
Snapchat redefined visual communication and pioneered AR lenses at scale. While Snap faces competition, Spiegel’s long-term bet on AR hardware and advertising continues to shape the future of social platforms.
4. Baiju Bhatt
- Age: 40
- Net Worth: ~$5–7B
- Company: Robinhood
- Industry: FinTech
- Founded: 2013
- How He Made His Money: IPO equity
- Summary:
Robinhood changed retail investing by eliminating commissions. Despite regulatory pressure and market volatility, the platform permanently altered brokerage economics, making Bhatt one of fintech’s most consequential founders.
5. Palmer Luckey
- Age: 33
- Net Worth: ~$2–3B
- Company: Oculus, Anduril Industries
- Industry: Defense Tech / Hardware
- Founded: Oculus (2012), Anduril (2017)
- How He Made His Money: Oculus sale + Anduril equity
- Summary:
After selling Oculus to Facebook, Luckey founded Anduril, a defense technology company building autonomous systems for national security. He represents a new class of billionaire emerging from defense-AI convergence, not consumer tech.
Key Takeaways (IMFOUNDER Analysis)
- Canada creates fewer young billionaires due to smaller exits—not weaker founders.
- The U.S. rewards infrastructure plays (AI, fintech, defense) faster and earlier.
- Equity ownership > salary, hype, or visibility.
- Most young billionaires build platforms, not products.




