While the specifics of Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s wedding remain shrouded in the secrecy (and perhaps subterfuge), the celebration this weekend at Madison Square Garden comes nearly three years to the day from when the Kansas City Chiefs tight end first tried, and failed, to slip his phone number to the world’s most famous pop star at her concert at Arrowhead Stadium. That year, 2023, was monumental for Swift in several ways—in addition to meeting her future husband, she kicked off the record-shattering Eras Tour and in October, she was officially added to the Forbes billionaires list.
For Richer Or Richer: Taylor Swift’s wedding to Travis Kelce will cost at least $20 million, according to Forbes estimates.
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That was just the beginning for the 36-year-old pop superstar, who has since enjoyed the most lucrative career stretch she, or arguably any musical artist, has ever had. Swift enters her wedding weekend with an estimated net worth north of $2.1 billion, by Forbes’ latest count. That total includes her now fully owning the masters and publishing rights to her enormously valuable music catalog, and an impressive $125 million real estate portfolio (including a Rhode Island home that many Swift-ologists believe would make, or has already made, an ideal wedding venue). But the rapid rise in her net worth is largely attributed to the unprecedented amount of money she has earned from recording and performing her music over the past three years.
The Eras Tour, which ran through the end of 2024, grossed more than $2 billion in ticket sales and hundreds of millions more in merchandise. A concert film of the tour, self-funded and distributed directly through AMC theaters, earned $260 million at the worldwide box office. She then sold it to stream on Disney+ for an estimated $75 million, adding a second Disney deal for a behind-the-scenes series and a second concert film for an additional estimated $100 million.
In 2025, boosted by the release of her album The Life of A Showgirl, data provider Luminate estimated her music catalog generated a staggering 14.7 million album-equivalent unit sales, more than double any other artist. She was Forbes’ second-highest paid musical artist of 2025 without a single tour date, earning an estimated $202 million before taxes and fees.
Those massive windfalls gave Swift the cash to aggressively pursue the rights to her first six albums, which had been passed from Scott Borchetta’s Big Machine to Scooter Braun’s Ithaca Holdings to Shamrock Capital over the past decade, much to her dismay. When she finally acquired them last May she called it “my greatest dream come true,” the final piece in a business operation that now controls every song, video and performance of her entire career. Through her deal with Universal’s Republic Records Swift also owns all future recordings, and has her own in-house management, touring and productions companies.
In theory, the purchase price of the early catalog would offset the value of the asset toward Swift’s net worth in an even swap. But Forbes estimates she was able to negotiate for a below-market rate—close to the $360 million price Braun received in his sale of the rights to Shamrock in 2020—given the leverage of public sentiment she could harness, and the threat of future album re-recordings.
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Many reports say that Taylor Swift initially planned to hold her wedding to Travis Kelce at her oceanfront home in Rhode Island. It’s just one property in a $125 million real estate portfolio which Forbes estimates is more valuable than the groom’s entire net worth
Beverly Hills mansion: $37.4 million
Rhode Island estate: $33.9 million
New York City penthouse: $17.6 million
New York City townhouse: $16.8 million
New York City loft: $9.5 million
Nashville house: $6.7 million
Nashville Music Row apartment: $3.6 million
Now that Swift controls her entire catalog, its overall value would be higher in the highly unlikely event it would ever reach the open market again. In truth, it’s almost impossible to estimate what someone would be willing to pay to acquire it if Swift were actually selling at this moment in her career. The largest catalog transactions of all time, both by Sony Music, valued each of Michael Jackson’s and Queen’s music rights at $1.2 billion, and those sales came many years after each artist had stopped recording and touring.
Swift, meanwhile, has many more hits ahead of her, including the current No. 1 song on the music charts, “I Knew It, I Knew You,” which appears in the end credits and on the soundtrack for this summer’s blockbuster Toy Story 5. The song sold 183,000 units in the U.S. and 71,000 units in the U.K. in its first week, both the high marks of 2026.
Initially, Swift declined to contribute a song to the movie—the master recordings for the soundtrack would, after all, belong to Disney—but a plea from producer Jessica Choi highlighting the movie’s female-focused vision eventually secured not only a song but also a brand association that no doubt helped its marketing efforts. Toy Story 5 grossed $312 million globally in its opening weekend and is on pace to cruise past the $1 billion mark by the end of its run. Swift showed up to the movie’s premiere with a VHS copy of the 1995 original, seeking autographs on it from cast members including Tom Hanks, Tim Allen and composer Randy Newman.
“I’ve always dreamed of getting to write for these characters who I’ve adored since I was a 5 year old kid watching the first Toy Story,” Swift wrote on Instagram.” I fell instantly in love with Toy Story 5 when I was lucky enough to see it in its early stages, and I wrote this song as soon as I got home from the screening.”
The song itself won’t really affect Swift’s wealth, but it could help fund a lavish wedding celebration. At the highest end of the market, top artists might receive an upfront fee of around $1 million and negotiate for a hefty percentage of the exhibition performance royalties for each time the song is played in international markets, but they do not participate directly in the movie’s box office success. Disney will collect the majority of the song’s streams and sales as the rights holder, and Swift will split the publishing share with co-writer and co-producer Jack Antonoff. By year’s end, the song itself will likely net her less than $5 million, but it will likely boost the streaming numbers on the rest of her music, feeding the fanbase’s insatiable need for new material.
“She gave Disney a No. 1, Disney gave her a global marketing campaign, and it paid off beautifully for both of them,” says Madison Norris, executive vice president at Round Hill Music, a leading music catalog management firm. “The hope now is she walks away with the Oscar.”
She would get an even bigger bump from the “Taylor’s Version” rerelease of her debut album Taylor Swift, which she has mentioned in interviews is already recorded and which celebrates its 20th anniversary this fall.
Meanwhile, Kelce’s wealth has seen a similar uptick since his relationship with Swift became public. The past two seasons, his playing contract with the Kansas City Chiefs has paid him more than $17 million per season—career highs—and this fall he has a contract for $12 million guaranteed. Forbes estimates the 36-year-old Kelce earned $30 million off the field in 2025 from commercials and a podcasting deal with Amazon, which picked up, New Heights, the podcaset he does with his brother, Jason, for three years and more than $100 million. He also has his own clothing brand, Tru Kolors, and brewery, Garage Beer, which he owns with his brother. Still, Forbes estimates his net worth to be around $80 million—a level of disparity that probably warrants a prenup.
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