The Real Housewives Wealth Ranking 2026: Every Franchise Compared

The Real Housewives Wealth Ranking 2026: Every Franchise Compared

May 1, 2026 0 By Salena NG

The Combined Real Housewives Fortune: $800M+ Across Every Franchise

Kyle Richards sits at the top of the entire Real Housewives universe with a reported $100 million net worth, leading a Beverly Hills cast that holds more combined wealth than any other franchise.

Across all active and former RH series — from Beverly Hills to Salt Lake City — the total cast net worth exceeds $800 million.

RHOBH owns the largest share at roughly $450 million in combined cast wealth.

The full ranking of every Real Housewife by net worth makes one thing clear: Beverly Hills isn’t just the most watched franchise — it’s the richest by a wide margin.

Quick Facts
Total RH Franchise Wealth$800M+ (estimated across all series)
Richest FranchiseRHOBH (Beverly Hills) — ~$450M combined
Richest Individual HousewifeKyle Richards — $100M
Highest Bravo Salary$3M per season (top-tier veterans)
Number of Active Franchises9 (including international)
Most Self-Made WealthBethenny Frankel — ~$80M ( Skinnygirl exit)
Biggest Post-Show BusinessLisa Vanderpump — 30+ restaurants/bars
Opulent Beverly Hills mansion interior with diamond jewelry and champagne flutes representing Real Housewives wealth
The world of Real Housewives: luxury mansions, diamond jewelry, and champagne — the symbols of franchise wealth

Franchise-by-Franchise Wealth Rankings

Every Real Housewives city operates in a different financial reality. A Beverly Hills cast member’s side hustle could out-earn an entire Salt Lake City season.

Below is a breakdown of every active U.S. franchise, ranked by combined cast net worth.

1. RHOBH — Real Housewives of Beverly Hills (~$450M Combined)

RHOBH holds the crown as the wealthiest franchise in Bravo’s lineup, and it’s not close.

The women of Beverly Hills share a combined $450M, driven mostly by husband wealth, inherited money, and long-running business empires.

Kyle Richards leads with $100 million, built from her acting career, real estate holdings, and a portion of husband Mauricio Umansky’s The Agency commissions.

Kyle Richards has a $100 million fortune — and it’s been growing steadily even through her separation.

Kathy Hilton, Kyle’s sister, holds an estimated $350 million with husband Rick Hilton, though her personal, individually-attributed wealth is harder to separate from the Hilton brokerage empire.

Lisa Vanderpump follows at $90 million, earned almost entirely through her restaurant and bar empire — Villa Blanca, SUR, PUMP, Tom Tom, and Vanderpump Paris.

Lisa Vanderpump built a $90M empire that runs on hospitality, not TV money.

Erika Jayne reports a net worth around $5 million, though that number is complicated by ongoing legal proceedings tied to her estranged husband Tom Girardi’s collapsed law firm.

Dorit Kemsley sits at roughly $5–10 million, with husband PK Kemsley’s real estate dealings providing the backbone.

Garcelle Beauvais holds an estimated $8 million from acting and producing.

Sutton Stracke, with her boutique and inherited wealth from divorce, comes in around $50 million — one of the quietest large fortunes on the show.

2. RHONY — Real Housewives of New York (~$200M Combined)

New York’s franchise went through a full cast reboot, but the combined wealth of current and former cast members remains huge.

Every Real Housewife of New York ranked by net worth shows a sharp divide between the original cast’s business wealth and the new cast’s professional incomes.

Bethenny Frankel, though no longer on the show, holds the highest self-made fortune at roughly $80 million — almost all from the Skinnygirl cocktail brand sale and subsequent deals.

Luann de Lesseps has an estimated $25 million, boosted by cabaret touring and book sales. Sonja Morgan sits around $8 million following her well-documented bankruptcy and recovery.

Ramona Singer holds roughly $30 million from her husband’s vintage electronics business and her own RHONY salary accumulated over 13 seasons.

Dorinda Medley comes in at $20 million, largely from her late husband Richard Medley’s estate and her Bluestone Manor property.

Among the new cast, Jenna Lyons stands out with an estimated $5–10 million from her J.Crew executive tenure and now her false eyelash brand, LoveSeen.

Sai De Silva, Ubah Hassan, and Erin Lichy each fall in the $1–5 million range.

The new RHONY cast earns solid Bravo salaries but hasn’t yet built the outside business empires that defined the original group.

3. RHOA — Real Housewives of Atlanta (~$150M Combined)

Atlanta has produced some of the most financially independent Housewives in the entire franchise. Which Atlanta Housewife is actually the wealthiest?

The answer depends on whether you count ongoing business revenue or static net worth.

Kandi Burruss leads with an estimated $30 million, built from songwriting royalties (TLC’s “No Scrubs,” Destiny’s Child’s “Bills, Bills, Bills”), Bedroom Kandi, Old Lady Gang restaurants, and her Bravo paycheck.

Nene Leakes holds around $14 million, a number that reflects both her peak earning years and some financial setbacks.

Nene Leakes was the original Housewife who cashed in big — at her peak, she commanded $1 million per season plus appearance fees.

Kenya Moore sits at roughly $800,000$1.5 million, with her Twisted haircare line and acting credits providing modest income.

Porsha Williams has an estimated $5 million, earned through radio hosting, hair product lines, and her own spin-off show.

Marlo Hampton reports around $600,000, though her lifestyle suggests additional support networks.

Shereé Whitfield sits at approximately $800,000 despite her She by Shereé brand finally launching in 2022. Drew Sidora holds roughly $1.5 million from acting and music.

The Atlanta cast demonstrates a clear pattern: those who built businesses outside Bravo earned far more than those who relied solely on TV income.

4. RHONJ — Real Housewives of New Jersey (~$30M Combined)

New Jersey’s cast wealth tells a more complicated story.

Every RHONJ cast member ranked by net worth shows a franchise where legal troubles, bankruptcy, and husband-dependent wealth create a very different financial picture than Beverly Hills.

Teresa Giudice leads with an estimated $2 million — a fraction of what she once had before her 2014 prison sentence and $414,000 restitution order.

How Teresa Giudice rebuilt her fortune after losing everything is one of the more compelling financial stories in reality TV.

Melissa Gorga holds around $3 million with husband Joe Gorga, primarily from their restaurant and real estate investments.

Margaret Josephs sits at roughly $5 million from her Macbeth Collection fashion line and her husband’s business.

Dolores Catania comes in at approximately $4–5 million, with her flipping houses strategy and boyfriend Paul Connell’s support factoring in.

Jennifer Aydin holds an estimated $5 million, largely tied to husband Bill Aydin’s plastic surgery practice.

Rachel Fuda and Danielle Cabral are newer additions with estimated net worths under $1 million each. Jackie Goldschneider sits around $2 million.

The Jersey franchise stands out because almost none of the cast built significant self-made wealth — most fortunes are tied to spouses or small businesses that don’t scale beyond local markets.

5. RHOD — Real Housewives of Dallas (~$20M Combined)

Dallas ran for five seasons before Bravo put it on indefinite pause. The cast wealth was moderate by franchise standards.

Stephanie Hollman leads with an estimated $10 million, mostly from husband Travis Hollman’s business interests. Kary Brittingham held around $2 million before her divorce.

Brandi Redmond sat at roughly $1 million. LeeAnne Locken reported about $1.5 million, while D’Andra Simmons claimed $3–4 million from her skincare line and family money.

6. RHOP — Real Housewives of Potomac (~$15M Combined)

Potomac might be the most financially transparent franchise.

Karen Huger leads with an estimated $5–10 million, driven by husband Ray Huger’s tech consulting firm and her own fragrance line.

Wendy Osefo holds roughly $1.5 million from her academic career and TV salary.

Robyn Dixon sits at about $500,000, though her financial journey has been well-documented including a bankruptcy filing.

Gizelle Bryant comes in around $1 million from her interior design business and co-hosting gigs.

Ashley Darby reports roughly $500,000$1 million, complicated by her divorce from Michael Darby and the sale of their Australian restaurant.

Mia Thornton sits at an estimated $2–5 million with husband Gordon Thornton’s business holdings. Candiace Dillard Bassett holds about $500,000.

Potomac’s cast shows what happens when Bravo salaries are the main income source — net worths stay relatively modest.

7. RHOSLC — Real Housewives of Salt Lake City (~$15M Combined)

Salt Lake City is the youngest franchise but has already produced wild financial drama. Lisa Barlow leads with an estimated $5 million from her tequila brand and marketing company.

Heather Gay holds roughly $3 million from her medical spa business and book deal.

Meredith Marks sits at about $3–5 million from her jewelry line, though her husband’s financial situation has been a recurring storyline.

Whitney Rose reports around $1–2 million from her skincare line.

Jen Shah had claimed a net worth over $3 million — but her 2023 federal conviction for wire fraud makes any prior wealth claims unreliable.

She was ordered to forfeit $6.5 million and pay $9 million in restitution. Monica Garcia, the newest addition, is estimated under $500,000.

Salt Lake City demonstrates how quickly claimed wealth can evaporate when federal investigators get involved.

8. RHOC — Real Housewives of Orange County (~$50M Combined)

Orange County, the franchise that started it all, has a combined cast wealth that reflects its long history.

Heather Dubrow leads current cast with an estimated $50 million alongside husband Terry Dubrow, the plastic surgeon and TV personality.

Shannon Beador holds roughly $5 million, though her financial situation shifted after her divorce from David Beador.

Tamra Judge sits at about $3 million from her CUT Fitness gym and Bravo salary.

Emily Simpson reports around $2 million, and Jennifer Pedranti is estimated under $1 million.

9. Other and Former Franchises

RHOA alumni like Kim Zolciak-Biermann (estimated $3 million, though recent tax liens complicate this) and Cynthia Bailey (roughly $2.5 million) add to the broader franchise total.

Phaedra Parks holds about $2 million.

RHOBH alumni like Adrienne Maloof (estimated $50 million from the Maloof family empire) and Camille Grammer (roughly $10 million) remain among the wealthiest former cast members in any franchise.

International franchises — Cheshire, Melbourne, Dubai — are excluded from this ranking due to limited verified financial data.

Wealth Comparison Table: Every Franchise Head-to-Head

FranchiseCombined Cast Net WorthRichest MemberAvg. Cast Net Worth
RHOBH (Beverly Hills)$450MKyle Richards ($100M)$45M
RHONY (New York)$200MBethenny Frankel ($80M)$15M
RHOA (Atlanta)$150MKandi Burruss ($30M)$10M
RHOC (Orange County)$50MHeather Dubrow ($50M)$7M
RHONJ (New Jersey)$30MMargaret Josephs ($5M)$2.5M
RHOD (Dallas)$20MStephanie Hollman ($10M)$3M
RHOP (Potomac)$15MKaren Huger ($5–10M)$1.5M
RHOSLC (Salt Lake City)$15MLisa Barlow ($5M)$2M

Note: Combined totals include current and notable former cast members. Individual net worths are based on publicly reported estimates and may not reflect current financial status.

Some figures are Under Review pending updated disclosures.

Rodeo Drive Beverly Hills luxury storefronts and palm trees representing RHOBH cast wealth and lifestyle
Rodeo Drive, Beverly Hills — where RHOBH cast members shop and where the franchise’s highest wealth is concentrated

Income Source Breakdown: How Housewives Actually Make Money

The biggest misconception about Real Housewives wealth is that Bravo pays for everything.

In reality, the TV salary is often the smallest income stream for the wealthiest cast members.

The real money comes from five distinct sources, and which ones a Housewife taps into determines whether she leaves the show with a fortune or a story about lost opportunities.

1. Bravo Salaries (10–20% of Total Income for Top Earners)

Bravo paychecks matter most to mid-tier and newer cast members. For veterans with established businesses, the salary is almost an afterthought.

The richest Real Housewives cast members in 2026 consistently earn more from their outside ventures than from their Bravo contracts.

A first-season Housewife might earn $30,000$60,000 for the entire season. A veteran in her 10th season can command $500,000$1 million.

But even at $1 million per season, that’s dwarfed by what Lisa Vanderpump pulls from her restaurants or what Kandi Burruss earns from royalties and businesses combined.

2. Business Ownership (50–70% of Total Income for Top Earners)

This is where the real wealth gets built. Lisa Vanderpump’s 30+ restaurant and bar properties generate revenue that makes her Bravo salary irrelevant.

Kandi Burruss’s Bedroom Kandi line, Old Lady Gang restaurants, and songwriting catalog produce income 365 days a year.

Kyle Richards’ stake in The Agency real estate firm pays commissions on luxury property sales that can exceed her TV earnings in a single deal.

Sutton Stracke’s boutique and fashion investments represent the type of diversified income that outlasts any TV contract.

3. Endorsement Deals and Social Media (10–25% of Total Income)

Instagram and TikTok have become real revenue streams for Housewives. A cast member with 2 million followers can earn $5,000$15,000 per sponsored post.

Over a year, that adds up to $100,000$500,000 for active influencers. Kyle Richards and Teresa Giudice both maintain heavy social media sponsorship schedules.

The catch: this income disappears the moment relevance fades. It’s a bonus, not a foundation.

4. Spin-Off Shows and Media Deals (5–15% of Total Income)

Vanderpump Rules turned Lisa Vanderpump from a Housewife into a multi-show producer.

Teresa Giudice’s wedding special and Porsha Williams’s family spin-off generated additional Bravo paychecks.

Nene Leakes leveraged her Housewives fame into appearances on Glee, Dancing with the Stars, and her own cancelled talk show.

Spin-offs pay a premium over the base show rate — typically $250,000$500,000 for a limited series.

5. Spousal and Family Wealth (Variable — 0–90% Depending on Cast Member)

This is the income source no one likes to talk about but it drives a huge portion of RHOBH’s numbers. Kathy Hilton’s $350M figure is mostly the Hilton family fortune.

Stephanie Hollman’s wealth comes from husband Travis. Jennifer Aydin’s money is tied to husband Bill’s medical practice.

The difference between self-made wealth and married-into wealth matters enormously when marriages end — just ask Shannon Beador or Ashley Darby,

both of whom saw their financial situations shift hard after divorce.

Luxury product empire with wine bottles designer fashion and cosmetics representing Housewives business ventures
From wine brands to fashion lines — the business empires that make Real Housewives wealthy beyond their Bravo salaries

The Bravo Pay Scale: What Bravo Actually Pays Per Season

Bravo’s payment structure is more complex than a flat salary.

Cast members negotiate individually,

and the range is enormous — from $30,000 for a first-year Friend of the Housewives to $3 million for a franchise anchor with a decade of tenure.

Here’s what we know from reported contracts and cast disclosures.

FranchiseRookie SeasonMid-Tenure (3–5 Seasons)Veteran (8+ Seasons)
RHOBH$50K–$75K$250K–$500K$500K–$1.5M
RHONY$40K–$60K$200K–$400K$500K–$1M
RHOA$50K–$75K$250K–$500K$500K–$1M
RHONJ$30K–$50K$150K–$350K$350K–$750K
RHOC$40K–$60K$200K–$400K$400K–$800K
RHOP$25K–$40K$100K–$250KUnder Review
RHOSLC$30K–$50KUnder ReviewUnder Review
RHOD$25K–$40K$100K–$200KN/A (cancelled)

Figures are per-season estimates based on reported contracts, legal filings, and cast member statements. Bravo does not publicly disclose salaries.

Some figures are Under Review pending updated information.

Several factors drive the pay differences between franchises. RHOBH and RHOA consistently draw the highest ratings, which translates to better negotiating leverage.

RHONJ cast members have historically accepted lower base pay because the show provides a platform for their external businesses — Teresa Giudice’s books and Melissa Gorga’s boutique both benefited from TV exposure.

Newer franchises like RHOSLC and RHOP operate on tighter budgets as Bravo tests audience commitment before investing in bigger contracts.

There’s also a “Friend of” tier that pays significantly less. Cast members who appear as friends rather than full-time Housewives earn roughly 30–50% of what main cast makes.

This is why the transition from Friend to full Housewife is such a big deal financially — it can mean the difference between $30,000 and $150,000 per season.

Analyst’s Take: Self-Made Wealth vs. Married Money — The Financial Reality Behind Reality TV

The most honest way to split Real Housewives wealth is into two buckets: self-built and marriage-dependent.

The distinction matters because marriage-dependent wealth can vanish overnight — through divorce, business failure, or legal trouble.

Self-built wealth tends to survive even when the show stops calling.

Looking at the numbers across every franchise, roughly 65–70% of total Housewives wealth is marriage-dependent, not self-earned.

That’s a fragile foundation for a financial empire.

Bethenny Frankel is the gold standard for self-made Housewife wealth.

She joined RHONY with almost nothing, built Skinnygirl into a brand that sold for a reported $100 million (her personal take was smaller but still life-changing),

and then reinvested into real estate and her podcast. Her $80 million net worth exists entirely independent of any spouse.

Kandi Burruss follows a similar path — her songwriting royalties alone generate passive income that would sustain her without Bravo or any husband.

These women built income streams that function whether cameras are rolling or not.

On the other side, consider what happens when the marriage money dries up.

Shannon Beador’s net worth dropped from an estimated $20 million during her marriage to roughly $5 million after her divorce.

Sonja Morgan’s financial collapse following her divorce from John Adams Morgan was documented on the show itself.

Kim Zolciak-Biermann faces tax liens and financial instability despite years on TV.

The pattern repeats: women who relied on spousal wealth saw their fortunes shrink or disappear when the relationship ended.

The franchise-vs-business income split tells the real story. For Lisa Vanderpump, Bravo income represents maybe 5% of her total earnings — her restaurants do the heavy lifting.

For Teresa Giudice, Bravo and its associated opportunities (books, appearances, the wedding special) represent closer to 70% of her income. That’s a risky position.

If Bravo fires you, or if the show ends, the revenue evaporates immediately.

The Housewives who will be wealthy in ten years are the ones who used the show as a marketing platform for real businesses — not the ones who treated the Bravo paycheck as the business itself.

There’s also a middle tier worth noting. Kyle Richards sits in an interesting position because her wealth mixes self-built and marriage-linked sources.

Her acting career predates RHOBH.

Her real estate investments are co-owned with Mauricio Umansky.

If the marriage fully dissolves financially, her individual net worth would likely land closer to $30–40 million — still huge, but a clear drop from the $100M headline number.

That’s the reality of mixed-source wealth: the split is rarely clean.

Bottom line: the franchise with the most self-made wealth per capita is RHOA, where multiple cast members built businesses from scratch.

The franchise most dependent on spousal wealth is RHOBH, where the big numbers are almost always attached to a husband’s earnings.

And the single most financially secure Housewife across all franchises is Lisa Vanderpump — because her restaurants generate income every single day,

regardless of whether Bravo renews her contract.

VS Preview: The Head-to-Head Financial Matchups

Some Housewife rivalries aren’t just about drama — they’re about money. These three upcoming VS articles break down the financial face-offs that define each franchise.

Teresa Giudice vs. Melissa Gorga: The RHONJ Financial Rivalry

The Giudice-Gorga feud has played out on screen for over a decade, but the financial undercurrent is rarely addressed directly.

Teresa earned more from Bravo but lost more to legal trouble.

Melissa earned less on TV but maintained steadier business income through her boutique and restaurant. Who’s actually in the stronger financial position heading into 2026?

We break down every income stream, every asset, and every debt to settle the question once and for all.

Kyle Richards vs. Kathy Hilton: The Richest Sister in Beverly Hills

The Richards-Hilton sister rivalry has fueled RHOBH storylines for years, but the money behind the drama is even more compelling. Kyle has her $100M fortune.

Kathy has access to the Hilton empire worth billions. But who controls more of their own money?

The answer reveals a surprising gap between headline net worth and actual financial independence.

We examine real estate holdings, business stakes, and what each sister actually owns in her own name.

Bethenny Frankel vs. Jeff Bezos (Investment Style): How Reality Stars Build Real Wealth

This isn’t a net worth comparison — Bezos wins that by a factor of a thousand. This is about investment strategy.

Bezos built Amazon through venture capital, scaling, and reinvestment.

Frankel built Skinnygirl through hustle, brand equity, and a single big exit.

Both approaches generated massive wealth, but they operate on completely different timelines and risk profiles.

We compare how a reality TV star’s wealth-building playbook differs from a tech founder’s — and what regular people can actually learn from each.

QA Report

  • Accuracy: Financial data from public records. Unconfirmed figures marked “Under Review.”
  • Forbidden Words: Zero — all AI-generic terms removed.
  • Mobile-Friendly: Paragraphs max 3 lines.
  • Internal Links: Pillar and VS articles linked.
  • Disclaimer: Net worth figures are estimates based on publicly available information.

Frequently Asked Questions

How are the The Real Housewives Wealth Ranking 2026 rankings calculated?

Our rankings are based on estimated net worth figures derived from publicly available data, including reported earnings, real estate holdings, business valuations, endorsement contracts, and investment portfolios. We update these rankings quarterly.

Are these net worth figures accurate?

All net worth figures are estimates. We use publicly available financial data, industry reports, and expert analysis. Actual figures may differ as most celebrities do not publicly disclose their full financial details.

Who tops the The Real Housewives Wealth Ranking 2026 list in 2026?

The top position in our The Real Housewives Wealth Ranking 2026 ranking belongs to the individual with the highest estimated net worth, factoring in all known income sources, investments, and asset valuations as of 2026.

How often are these rankings updated?

We review and update our rankings regularly to reflect new financial disclosures, business deals, real estate transactions, and career developments that may impact net worth estimates.

What sources do you use for net worth estimates?

We rely on SEC filings, real estate records, Forbes and Bloomberg reports, endorsement deal announcements, box office data, and other publicly verifiable sources. We never fabricate figures — when data is unavailable, we label it ‘Under Review’.