
Andy Jassy is President & CEO of Amazon (AMZN). Most of a public-company CEO’s on-paper wealth is their stake in that company — anchored here on the number you can verify.
We’re matching Andy Jassy’s latest SEC beneficial-ownership filing to compute the verified stake value. In the meantime, the full pay breakdown and the AMZN workspace are live. We only publish the stake once it traces to a specific filing — no guesses.
| Company | Amazon (AMZN) |
| Title | President & CEO |
| Verified stake | — |
| Shares owned | — |
| Latest total pay | $2M breakdown → |
| Age | ~58 |
We take the shares Andy Jassy reports owning in their most recent SEC Form 4 and multiply by the latest share price. That gives a stake value you can check against the filing itself. Everything beyond that stake — real estate, private holdings, cash, past compensation — is estimated or simply not public, and we say so rather than roll it into one number.
Andy Jassy was born in 1968 and grew up in Scarsdale, a well-off suburb of New York, the son of a prominent corporate lawyer. A sports-obsessed kid and lifelong New York fan, he went to Harvard for both his undergraduate degree and his MBA, editing the student newspaper along the way.
He joined Amazon in 1997, soon after business school, and became one of Jeff Bezos’s early lieutenants, at one point serving as his technical adviser or shadow. In 2003 he helped conceive and then built Amazon Web Services, the cloud-computing business that turned into the company’s profit engine.
Running AWS for nearly two decades made Jassy the natural successor when Bezos stepped back, and he became Amazon’s chief executive in 2021. He inherited a retail and cloud giant and has spent his tenure on costs, logistics, and Amazon’s own push into AI.
Jassy’s stake is built from Amazon stock earned across a 25-year career, not a founding position, so it is far smaller than Bezos’s though still substantial.
Born 1968 · Harvard College (BA); Harvard Business School (MBA)
| Fiscal year | Total pay |
|---|---|
| 2025 | $2M |
| 2024 | $2M |
| 2023 | $1M |
The stake value is filing-derived and verifiable; any broader “net worth” is an estimate. Photo: Lisi Mezistrano Wolf, CC BY-SA 4.0 (Wikimedia Commons). Share counts are the latest reported on SEC filings and change as the executive trades; the price is the last close, so the stake value moves with the market. This is not an official or complete accounting of anyone’s wealth. Educational only — not investment advice.