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Received yesterday β€” 25 April 2025

Meet Bill Gates' kids Jennifer, Rory, and Phoebe: From a pediatrician to a fashion startup cofounder

Bill Gates' three children with Melinda French Gates: from left to right, Jennifer Gates Nassar, Rory Gates, and Phoebe Gates
Bill Gates shares three children with Melinda French Gates, pictured here from left to right, Jennifer Gates Nassar, Rory Gates, and Phoebe Gates.

Jean Catuffe/Getty Images // SAUL LOEB // John Nacion/Variety

  • Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates shares three kids with his ex-wife Melinda French Gates.
  • His eldest daughter is a med school graduate and his youngest a startup cofounder.
  • Here's what we know about the children of one of the world's richest men.

Bill Gates' story is a quintessential example of the American entrepreneurial dream: A brilliant math whiz, Gates was 19 when he dropped out of Harvard and cofounded Microsoft with his friend, the late Paul Allen, in 1975.

Nearly 50 years later, Gates' net worth of almost $108 billion makes him one of the richest and most famous men on Earth, per Forbes. He stepped down from Microsoft's board in 2020 and has cultivated his brand of philanthropy with the Gates Foundation β€” a venture he formerly ran with his now ex-wife Melinda French Gates, who resigned in May.Β 

Even before founding one of the world's most valuable companies, Gates' life was anything but ordinary. He grew up in a well-off and well-connected family, surrounded by his parents' rarefied personal and professional network. Their circle included a Cabinet secretary and a governor of Washington, according to "Hard Drive," the 1992 biography of Gates by James Wallace and Jim Erickson. (Brock Adams, who went on to become the transportation secretary in the Carter administration, is said to have introduced Gates' parents.)

His father, William Gates Sr., was a prominent corporate lawyer in Seattle and the president of the Washington State Bar Association.

His mother, Mary Gates, came from a line of successful bankers and sat on the boards of important financial and social institutions, including the nonprofit United Way. It was there, according to her New York Times obituary, that she met the former IBM chairman John Opel β€” a fateful connection thought to have led to IBM enlisting Microsoft to provide an operating system in the 1980s.

"My parents were well off β€” my dad did well as a lawyer, took us on great trips, we had a really nice house," Gates said in the 2019 Netflix documentary "Inside Bill's Brain."

"And I've had so much luck in terms of all these opportunities."

Despite his very public life, his three children with French Gates β€” Jennifer, Rory, and Phoebe β€” have largely avoided the spotlight for most of their upbringing.Β 

Like their father, the three Gates children attended Seattle's elite Lakeside School, a private high school that has been recognized for excellence in STEM subjects β€” and that received a $40 million donation from Bill Gates in 2005 to build its financial aid fund. (Bill Gates and Paul Allen met at Lakeside and went on to build Microsoft together.)

As they've gotten older, they've stepped more into the public eye, and more details have emerged about their interests, professions, and family life.Β 

Gates recently said his children will get "less than 1%" of his fortune when he dies. But they may also inherit the family foundation, where most of his money will go.

Here's all we know about Bill Gates' children.

Gates and his children did not respond to requests for comment for this story.

Jennifer Gates Nassar
Jennifer Gates and Bill Gates
Jennifer Gates and Bill Gates attended the Paris Olympic Games in 2024.

Jean Catuffe/Getty Images

Jennifer Gates Nassar, who goes by Jenn, is the oldest of the Gates children at 28 years old.

A decorated equestrian, Gates Nassar started riding horses when she was six. Her father has shelled out millions of dollars to support her passion, including buying a California horse farm for $18 million and acquiring several parcels of land in Wellington, Florida, to build an equestrian facility.

In 2018, Gates Nassar received her undergraduate degree in human biology from Stanford University, where a computer science building was named for her father after he donated $6 million to the project in 1996.

She then attended the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, from which she graduated in May. She's continuing at Mt. Sinai for her residency in pediatric research. During medical school, she also completed a Master's in Public Health at Columbia University β€” perhaps a natural interest given her parents' extensive philanthropic activity in the space.

"Can't believe we've reached this moment, a little girl's childhood aspiration come true," she wrote on Instagram. "It's been a whirlwind of learning, exams, late nights, tears, discipline, and many moments of self-doubt, but the highs certainly outweighed the lows these past 5 years."

In October 2021, she married Egyptian equestrian Nayel Nassar. In February 2023, reports surfaced that they bought a $51 million New York City penthouseΒ with six bedrooms and a plunge pool. The next month, they welcomed their first child, Leila, and in October, Gates Nassar gave birth to their second daughter, Mia.

"I'm over the moon for you,Β @jenngatesnassarΒ andΒ @nayelnassarβ€”and overjoyed for our whole family," Bill Gates commented on the Instagram post announcing Mia's birth.

In a 2020 interview with the equestrian lifestyle publication Sidelines, Gates Nassar discussed growing up wealthy.

"I was born into a huge situation of privilege," she said. "I think it's about using those opportunities and learning from them to find things that I'm passionate about and hopefully make the world a little bit of a better place."

She recently posted about visiting Kenya, where she learned about childhood health and development in the country.

Rory John Gates
melinda and rory gates
Rory Gates, the least public of the Gates children, has reportedly infiltrated powerful circles of Washington, D.C.

Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

Rory John Gates, who is in his mid-20s, is Bill Gates and Melinda French Gates' only son and the most private of their children. He maintains private social media accounts, and his sisters and parents rarely post photos of him.

His mother did, however, write an essay about him in 2017. Titled "How I Raised a Feminist Son," she describes as a "great son and a great brother" who "inherited his parents' obsessive love of puzzles."

In 2022, he graduated from the University of Chicago, where, based on a photo posted on Facebook, he appears to have been active in moot court. At the time of his graduation, Jennifer Gates Nassar wrote that he had achieved a double major and master's degree.

Little is publicly known about what the middle Gates child has been up to since he graduated, but a Puck report from last year gave some clues, saying that he is seen as a "rich target for Democratic social-climbers, influence-peddlers, and all variety of money chasers."

Phoebe Gates
Melinda French Gates and Phoebe Gates
Phoebe Gates has a fashion startup and a podcast.

John Nacion/Variety

Phoebe Gates, 22, is the youngest of the Gates children.

After graduating from high school in 2021, she followed her sister to Stanford. She graduated in June after three years with a Bachelor of Science in Human Biology. Her mom, Melinda French Gates, delivered the university's commencement address.

In a story that Gates wrote for Nylon about her graduation, she documented the day, including a party she cohosted that featured speeches from her famous parents and a piggyback ride from her boyfriend Arthur Donald β€” the grandson of Sir Paul McCartney.

She has long shown an interest in fashion, interning at British Vogue and posting on social media from fashion weeks in Copenhagen, New York, and Paris. Sustainability is often a theme of her content, which highlights vintage and secondhand storesΒ and celebrates designers who don't use real leather and fur.

That has culminated in her cofounding Phia, a sustainable fashion tech platform that launched in beta this fall. The site and its browser extension crawl secondhand marketplaces to find specific items in an effort to help shoppers find deals and prevent waste.

Her father told The New York Times he was glad she didn't ask him to back the startup.

"I thought, 'Oh boy, she's going to come and ask,'" Gates said. "I would have kept her on a short leash and be doing business reviews, which I would have found tricky, and I probably would have been overly nice, but wondered if it was the right thing to do. Luckily, it never happened."

In 2025, Phoebe also launched a podcast called "The Burnouts" with her former roommate and current cofounder Sofia Kianni.

Gates shares her parents' passion for public health. She's attended the UN General Assembly with her mother and spent time in Rwanda with Partners in Health, a nonprofit that has received funding from the Gates Foundation.

Like her mother, Gates often publicly discusses issues of gender equality, including in essays for Vogue and Teen Vogue, at philanthropic gatherings, and on social media, where she frequently posts about reproductive rights.

She's given thousands to Democrats and Democratic causes, including to Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer and the Democratic Party of Montana, per data from OpenSecrets. According to Puck, she receives a "giving allowance" that makes it possible for her to cut the checks.

Perhaps the most public of the Gates children β€” she's got over 450,000 Instagram followers and a partnership with Tiffany & Co. β€” she's given glimpses into their upbringing, including strict rules around technology. The siblings were not allowed to use their phones before bed, she told Bustle, and to get around the rule, she created a cardboard decoy.

"I thought I could dupe my dad, and it worked, actually, for a couple nights," she told the outlet earlier this year. "And then my mom came home and was like, 'This is literally a piece of cardboard you're plugging in. You're using your phone in your room.' Oh, my gosh, I remember getting in trouble for that."

It hasn't always been easy being Gates's daughter. In the Netflix documentary "What's Next? The Future With Bill Gates," she said she lost friends because of a conspiracy theory suggesting her father used COVID-19 vaccines to implant microchips into recipients.

"I've even had friends cut me off because of these vaccine rumors," she said.

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Bill Gates says he's glad his daughter didn't ask him to back her business

25 April 2025 at 16:50
Bill Gates and his daughter Phoebe arrive for TIME 100 Gala at Lincoln Center in New York on June 8, 2022.
Bill Gates said his youngest daughter "luckily" didn't ask him to back her business, Phia.

ANGELA WEISS/AFP/Getty Images

  • Phoebe Gates, youngest daughter of Bill and Melinda Gates, co-founded her own business.
  • Bill Gates said she 'luckily' didn't ask for funding to get Phia, an e-commerce tool, off the ground.
  • The Gateses had previously told her that dropping out to start a company wasn't an option.

Phoebe Gates, the youngest of Bill and Melinda Gates's children, has made her own entry into the business world.

Her billionaire father is glad he didn't have to fund it.

"I thought, 'Oh boy, she's going to come and ask,'" Gates told The New York Times in an interview published Thursday.

Gates would've backed his daughter's business, but his help would've come with strings β€” and that would have made things complicated, he said.

"I would have kept her on a short leash and be doing business reviews, which I would have found tricky, and I probably would have been overly nice, but wondered if it was the right thing to do. Luckily, it never happened," he said.

Phia, which launched April 24, offers price comparisons for clothing across 40,000 linked sites, aiming to bring users the best deals.

On an episode earlier this year of "The Burnouts," the podcast Phoebe Gates hosts with her former roommate and current cofounder Sofia Kianni, Gates said her father was apprehensive about her starting a business.

And Phoebe dropping out of college β€” like Bill did when he founded Microsoft β€” was totally out of the question.

"I literally never hear my dad talk about the start of Microsoft," Gates said. "I literally mostly just remember him talking about the foundation. I remember me wanting to start the company and him being like, 'Are you sure you want to do this?'"

Gates graduated from Stanford in 2024 with a degree in human biology, having completed her education in just three years.

"They were very much like, 'You need to finish your degree; you don't just get to like, drop out and do a company.' Which is so funny because my dad literally did that, and that's, like, the reason I'm able to go to Stanford or have my tuition paid," Gates said.

Gates felt like a "nepo baby" in her freshman year, she said at the time. And though her father has previously said he plans on allowing his kids to inherit only 1% of his total wealth β€” that still amounts to millions each.

"If the business is successful, people will say, 'It's because of her family,'" Gates told The New York Times. "And a huge portion of that is true. I never would have been able to go to Stanford, or have such an amazing upbringing, or feel the drive to do something, if it wasn't for my parents. But I also feel a huge amount of internalized pressure."

So far, Gates and Kianni have secured over half a million dollars in funding β€” some from a VC firm, some from angel investors, according to The Times.

Gates said her business venture is tapping a huge market.

"We're roommates fighting about clothing," Gates told the New York Times. "We are the girls who are scouring shopping sites for deals. And there are, frankly, thousands of other young women like us."

Read the original article on Business Insider

Received before yesterday

Here's how the 10 richest people in the world fared after Trump's tariffs

4 April 2025 at 06:26
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos watches as Google CEO Sundar Pichai and Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk check their phones while attending Trump's inauguration.
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Google CEO Sundar Pichai, and Tesla and Tesla CEO Elon Musk lost billions this week in the market selloff.

SAUL LOEB / POOL / AFP

  • The world's top 10 richest people saw $74 billion vanish on paper after Trump's tariffs.
  • Trump's tariffs triggered a huge market sell-off.
  • Musk lost $11 billion and Bezos nearly $16 billion, per the Bloomberg Billionaire Index.

The world's top 10 richest people saw $74 billion vanish on paper after this week's market rout, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs on Wednesday afternoon triggered market chaos. Stocks suffered their worst single-day loss in five years on Thursday. The S&P 500 dropped nearly 5%, the Dow lost 1,679 points, and the Nasdaq composite plunged 6%.

Here's how much the wealthiest have lost since the tariff announcement and how it compares to their net worth, per Bloomberg:

Elon Musk

-$11.0 billion ( -2.5%)

Elon Musk.
Elon Musk has remained a fixture in Washington since the start of President Donald Trump's second term.

Graeme Sloan for The Washington Post via Getty Images

Elon Musk has seen his net worth fluctuate wildly over the past several weeks, as his involvement with the White House DOGE office has drawn public ire and boycotts against Tesla, sending Tesla's stock down.

Musk's wealth largely comes from his stake in Tesla, but he is also the CEO of X/Twitter, Neuralink, the Boring Company, and SpaceX. He's worth $322 billion, per the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, making him the world's richest person.

Jeff Bezos

-$15.9 billion ( -6.7%)

Jeff Bezos.
Jeff Bezos stepped down as Amazon's CEO in 2021 but remains closely tied to the company's strategic operation.

AP Photo/John Loche

Bezos is the founder and executive chairman of Amazon, and he is worth $201 billion. He also owns The Washington Post, which he purchased in 2013. Bezos stepped down as Amazon's CEO in 2021.

Mark Zuckerberg

-$17.9 billion ( -8.6%)

Mark Zuckerberg
Mark Zuckerberg, the cofounder, chairman, and CEO of Meta, has a net worth of $189 billion.

Manuel Orbegozo/REUTERS

Mark Zuckerberg has been facing criticism over rolling back fact-checking on Meta platforms, including Facebook, Threads, and Instagram, and replacing that with "community notes."

Zuckerberg is the cofounder, chairman, and CEO of Meta, putting him at a net worth of $189 billion.

Warren Buffet

-$2.57 billion ( -1.8%)

Warren Buffet
Warren Buffett is the chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, a multinational conglomerate holding company.

Reuters/Mario Anzuoni

Warren Buffett, with a net worth of $165 billion, is the chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, a multinational conglomerate holding company. Through Berkshire, Buffett owns a wide range of businesses, including GEICO, BNSF Railway, and Dairy Queen.

Berkshire Hathaway's largest holding is Apple, which makes up around 20% of its portfolio.

Bernard Arnault

-$6.22 billion ( -3.5%)

Bernard Arnault walking past a royal guard.
Bernard Arnault, the chairman and CEO of LVMH, has a net worth of $163 billion.

Chesnot/Getty Images

Bernard Arnault is the chairman and CEO of LVMH, the world's largest luxury goods conglomerate. The majority of his $163 billion comes from his stake in LVMH, which owns over 75 brands across fashion, cosmetics, jewelry, and spirits, including Louis Vuitton, Dior, and MoΓ«t & Chandon.

LVMH has been reporting declining sales under dampened consumer sentiments in multiple countries.

Bill Gates

-$291 million ( -0.2%)

Bill Gates sitting in a chair holding a microphone.
Bill Gates, the co-founder of Microsoft, has a net worth of $162 billion.

Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for Netflix

Bill Gates is the cofounder of Microsoft, though he stepped down from the company's board in 2020 and now owns only a small percentage of its shares. Most of his $162 billion in wealth is managed through Cascade Investment, a private firm that holds major stakes in companies like the Four Seasons Hotels.

Gates also runs the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, a philanthropy organization that supports global health, education, and climate initiatives.

Larry Ellison

-$8.10 billion ( -4.2%)

Larry Ellison.
Larry Ellison, the co-founder, executive chairman, and chief technology officer of Oracle, is also a major investor in Tesla.

Elizabeth Frantz/REUTERS

Larry Ellison is the cofounder, executive chairman, and chief technology officer of Oracle, one of the world's largest software and cloud computing companies. With a net worth of $160 billion, Ellison is also a major investor in Tesla and owns a large portion of Lanai, a Hawaiian island.

Ellison, along with OpenAI's Sam Altman and SoftBank's Masayoshi Son, are also spearheading Project Stargate, a $500 billion AI infrastructure initiative supported by Trump.

Larry Page

-$4.79 billion ( -2.9%)

Larry Page speaks during the Fortune Global Forum at the Legion Of Honor on November 2, 2015 in San Francisco, California.
Larry Page stepped down as Alphabet's CEO in 2019.

Kimberly White/Getty Images for Fortune

Larry Page is the cofounder of Google and a board member of its parent company, Alphabet. While he stepped down as Alphabet's CEO in 2019, he remains a major shareholder and influential figure, with a net worth of $138 billion.

Page is also a major backer of Kitty Hawk and Opener, companies that are developing electric flying vehicles.

Steve Ballmer

-$2.85 billion ( -1.9%)

Steve Ballmer speaks onstage at the Intuit Dome opening night event held at Intuit Dome on August 15, 2024 in Inglewood, California.
Steve Ballmer is the former CEO of Microsoft and remains one of the company's largest individual shareholders.

Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images

Steve Ballmer is the former CEO of Microsoft, a role he held from 2000 to 2014. He remains one of the company's largest individual shareholders, with a net worth of $131 billion.

Outside Microsoft, Ballmer also owns the Los Angeles Clippers, an NBA team he purchased in 2014 for $2 billion.

Sergey Brin

-$4.46 billion ( -2.8%)

Sergey Brin
Google cofounder Sergey Brin played a key role in developing its early search algorithms.

Kelly Sullivan/Getty Images

Sergey Brin is the cofounder of Google and played a key role in developing its early search algorithms. He served as president of Alphabet until stepping down in 2019.

Like Page, Brin retains significant influence at Alphabet through his Class B shares. Most of his $130 billion net worth is tied to Alphabet stock.

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