
Dara Khosrowshahi is CEO of Uber (UBER). Most of a public-company CEO’s on-paper wealth is their stake in that company — anchored here on the number you can verify.
Past cash compensation, sold shares, real estate, and other public holdings — estimable from records, but not exact.
Private company stakes, trusts, cash, debts, and undisclosed assets. Anyone publishing these as a single number is guessing.
| Company | Uber (UBER) |
| Title | CEO |
| Verified stake | $91M |
| Shares owned | 1,225,802 |
| Latest total pay | $36M breakdown → |
| Age | ~57 |
We take the shares Dara Khosrowshahi 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.
Dara Khosrowshahi was born in Tehran, Iran, in 1969 into a prominent family that ran a large industrial conglomerate. The family fled during the 1979 revolution, and his father was later detained in Iran for years, leaving his mother to hold the family together in the United States. He studied electrical engineering at Brown.
He got his start at the investment bank Allen and Company, then joined Barry Diller’s media empire and became chief financial officer of IAC. In 2005 he took over Expedia and grew it into a global travel giant, and in 2017 he was recruited to run Uber, steering it through a culture overhaul and its 2019 public offering.
Khosrowshahi is a hired executive. His wealth comes from stock compensation at Expedia and Uber rather than a founding stake, which is the equity this page tracks at Uber.
Born 1969 · Brown University (BS, Electrical Engineering)
| Fiscal year | Total pay |
|---|---|
| 2025 | $36M |
| 2024 | $39M |
The stake value is filing-derived and verifiable; any broader “net worth” is an estimate. Photo: The Presidential Office of Ukraine., CC BY 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.