Jordan Belfort

Jordan Belfort Net Worth 2025: Earnings & Career

Jordan Belfort, famously known as the "Wolf of Wall Street," is an American former stockbroker whose high-flying career, dramatic downfall, and subsequent reinvention have made him a global icon in both finance and pop culture. This article explores his biography, personal details, relationships, financial standing for 2025, career trajectory, business ventures, social network presence, and educational background.

Personal Profile About Jordan Belfort

Age, Biography, and Wiki

Jordan Belfort rose to fame as the founder of the brokerage firm Stratton Oakmont, which became infamous for aggressive sales tactics and securities fraud. After pleading guilty to fraud in 1999, he served 22 months in federal prison and was ordered to pay substantial restitution to his victims. Post-prison, Belfort reinvented himself as a motivational speaker and author, most notably writing the memoir The Wolf of Wall Street, which was adapted into a major motion picture starring Leonardo DiCaprio.

Occupation Motivational Speaker
Date of Birth 9 July 1962
Age 63 Years
Birth Place New York City, U.S.
Horoscope Cancer
Country U.S

Height, Weight & Measurements

While specifics on his body measurements are not widely reported, Belfort is recognized for his charismatic presence and energetic stage demeanor.

Height 173 cm
Weight 163 lbs
Body Measurements
Eye Color
Hair Color

Dating & Relationship Status

Belfort has maintained a relatively private personal life in recent years, focusing on his family and career.

They were both accountants. He has an older brother named Robert. His paternal grandfather, Jack Belfort (1904–1970), was an immigrant from Russia, while his grandmother was a Second Generation American born to Lithuanian parents in New Jersey. Belfort was raised in Bayside, Queens. Between completing high school and starting college, Belfort and his close childhood friend Elliot Loewenstern earned $20,000 selling scooped Italian ice from styrofoam coolers to people at Jones Beach Field 2 and West-end 2.

Belfort married his first wife Denise Lombardo in 1985. While running Stratton Oakmont, Belfort and Lombardo were divorced. He later married Nadine Caridi, a British-born, Bay Ridge, Brooklyn-raised model whom he met at a party. He had two children with her. Belfort and Caridi ultimately separated following her claims of domestic violence, which were fueled by his problems with drug addiction and infidelity. They divorced in 2005.

Parents
Husband Denise Lombardo (m. 1985-1991) Nadine Caridi (m. 1991-2005) Anne Koppe (m. 2008-2020) Cristina Invernizzi (m. 2021)
Sibling
Children

Net Worth and Salary

Despite ongoing legal obligations, Belfort maintains a high-profile lifestyle, with assets including real estate, luxury cars, and yachts.

Belfort went on to graduate from American University with a degree in biology. Belfort planned to use the money earned with Loewenstern to pay for dental school, and he enrolled at the University of Maryland School of Dentistry. However, the dean of the dental school gave a welcoming speech on the first day in which he said, "The golden age of dentistry is over. If you're here simply because you're looking to make a lot of money, you're in the wrong place." Belfort subsequently elected not to attend the graduate program.

Belfort became an informant for the FBI and wore a wire against numerous partners and associates, later testifying against many of them. On July 18, 2003, Belfort was sentenced to four years in prison. Belfort served 22 months of the sentence at the Taft Correctional Institution in Taft, California, in exchange for a plea deal with the Federal Bureau of Investigation for running pump-and-dump scams that led to investor losses of approximately $200 million. Belfort was ordered to pay back $110.4 million that he swindled from stock buyers. Belfort shared a cell with Tommy Chong while serving his sentence, and Chong encouraged him to write about his experiences as a stockbroker. The pair remained friends after their release from prison, with Belfort crediting Chong for his new career direction as a motivational speaker and writer. At a motivational talk that he delivered in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, on May 19, 2014, Belfort stated:

Belfort's restitution agreement required him to pay 50% of his income toward restitution to the 1,513 clients he defrauded until 2009, with a total of $110 million in restitution further mandated. About $10 million of the $110 million that had been recovered by Belfort's victims as of 2013 was the result of the sale of forfeited properties.

In October 2013, federal prosecutors filed a complaint against Belfort. Several days later, the U.S. government withdrew its motion to find Belfort in default of his payments, after his lawyers argued that he had only been responsible for paying 50% of his salary to restitution until 2009, and not since. The restitution he paid during his parole period (after leaving prison) amounted to $382,910 in 2007, $148,799 in 2008, and $170,000 in 2009. After that period, Belfort began negotiating a restitution payment plan with the U.S. government.

The final deal Belfort made with the government was to pay a minimum of $10,000 per month for life toward the restitution, after a judge ruled that Belfort was not required to pay 50% of his income past the end of his parole. Belfort has claimed that he is putting the profits from his U.S. public speaking engagements and media royalties toward the restitution, in addition to the $10,000 per month.

Career, Business, and Investments

Jordan Ross Belfort (born July 9, 1962) is an American former stockbroker, financial criminal, and businessman who pleaded guilty to fraud and related crimes in connection with stock-market manipulation and running a boiler room as part of a penny-stock scam in 1999. Belfort spent 22 months in prison as part of an agreement under which, becoming an informant for the FBI and wearing a wire, he gave testimony against numerous partners and subordinates in his fraud scheme. He published the memoir The Wolf of Wall Street in 2007, which was adapted into Martin Scorsese's film of the same name released in 2013, in which he was played by Leonardo DiCaprio.

Belfort became a door-to-door meat and seafood salesman on Long Island, New York. He claims in interviews and his memoirs that the business was an initial success; he grew his meat-selling business to employ several workers and sell 5000 lb of beef and fish a week. The business ultimately failed, and he filed for bankruptcy at 25.

According to his memoirs and interviews, a family friend helped him find a job as a trainee stockbroker at L.F. Rothschild. Belfort says he was laid off after that firm experienced financial difficulties related to the Black Monday stock market crash of 1987.

Belfort founded Stratton Oakmont as a franchise of Stratton Securities, then later bought out the original founder. Stratton Oakmont functioned as a boiler room that marketed penny stocks and defrauded investors with "pump and dump" stock sales. During his years at Stratton, Belfort led a life of lavish parties and intensive use of recreational drugs, especially methaqualone—sold to him under the brand name "Quaalude"—that resulted in an addiction. Stratton Oakmont at one point employed over 1,000 stock brokers and was involved in stock issues totaling more than $1 billion, including being behind the initial public offering for footwear company Steve Madden. The firm was targeted by law enforcement officials throughout nearly its entire history, and its notoriety inspired the film Boiler Room (2000), as well as the biopic The Wolf of Wall Street (2013).

Stratton Oakmont was under near-constant scrutiny from the National Association of Securities Dealers (now the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority) from 1989 onward. Finally, in December 1996, the NASD expelled Stratton Oakmont, putting it out of business. Belfort was then indicted for securities fraud and money laundering in 1999.

"I got greedy. ... Greed is not good. Ambition is good, passion is good. Passion prospers. My goal is to give more than I get, that's a sustainable form of success. ... Ninety-five per cent of the business was legitimate. ... It was all brokerage firm issues. It was all legitimate, nothing to do with liquidating stocks."

Federal prosecutors and SEC officials involved in the case, however, have said, "Stratton Oakmont was not a real Wall Street firm, either literally or figuratively."

Belfort was previously a skeptic of cryptocurrency, having called bitcoin "frickin' insanity" and "mass delusion". As he learned more about cryptocurrency, and the prices skyrocketed, he changed his mind. Belfort has declined offers to create Wolf-themed non-fungible tokens despite saying that he "could easily make $10 million". He has also said that he is "massively looking forward to regulation" of cryptocurrency. Belfort is an investor in several cryptocurrency start-ups.

Belfort has given motivational speeches. This has included a tour of live seminars in Australia called "The Truth Behind His Success", in addition to other appearances. In a 60 Minutes interview about his new career, Belfort said of his former life that his "greatest regret is losing people's money". He also runs sales seminars called "Jordan Belfort's Straight Line Sales Psychology". When he first began speaking, he focused largely on motivation and ethics, then moved his focus to sales skills and entrepreneurship.

His speaking engagements are run through his business Global Motivation Inc. and, as of 2014, Belfort was spending three weeks of each month on the road for speaking engagements. The main theme of his speeches includes the importance of business ethics and learning from the mistakes he made during the 1990s—such as believing that he was justified in skirting the rules of financial regulators simply because it was a common thing to do. His per-engagement speaking fees have been about $30,000–75,000 and his per sales seminar fee can be $80,000 or more.

An investigation led by 7News and The Sunday Mail uncovered links between Belfort and employment company Career Pathways Australia run by Paul Conquest, who also has majority-ownership of Face to Face Training. These two brands were heavily promoted at Belfort workshops held at Brisbane's Eatons Hill Hotel. Belfort reportedly gave two workshops on Sales for the staff of Face to Face Training.

Social Network

He wrote his first book in the days following his release from prison (after a false start during his sentence, when he wrote and destroyed 130 initial pages). He received a $500,000 advance from Random House, and before its release, a bidding war began for the book's film rights. The former federal prosecutor who led the criminal investigation of Belfort said that he "invented much", that "he aggrandized his importance and reverence for him by others at his firm", and that, "The real Belfort story still includes thousands of victims who lost hundreds of millions of dollars that they never will be repaid."

In the 1990s, Belfort donated $100,000 to the Republican Party and $2,000 to Al D'Amato's reelection campaign in the 1992 United States Senate election in New York. Despite calling himself "a liberal at heart", with "social views [that] are liberal; abortion and stuff like that", Belfort said that in the run-up to the 2016 United States presidential election, he "became very pro-Trump . . . . And then when I saw what happened after he won, I was like‚ 'this country is worse than I thought!'. There's obviously such a problem with the liberals, I'd never seen anything like it." Ultimately Belfort voted for Donald Trump because he agreed with Trump on government size and immigration policy. Despite his support for Trump he has also acknowledged that Trump's rhetoric is divisive. During the 2020 Democratic primaries, he criticized Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren for policy proposals that would affect financial institutions, saying, "What frightens me about a Bernie Sanders or an Elizabeth Warren is like they think that government is the answer but the policies that they're talking about will literally destroy the fabric of the country."

Education

Belfort’s formal education was brief, and his entrepreneurial drive led him to pursue business ventures early in his career.

In 2017, he went on to write Way of the Wolf: Straight Line Selling: Master the Art of Persuasion, Influence, and Success. It details the sales technique he used alongside his team of brokers while operating on Wall Street. In 2023, Belfort released The Wolf of Investing which he claims to be his ultimate strategy for making money on Wall St.

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