- Category:
- Richest Athletes › Hockey
- Net Worth:
- $250 Million
- Birthdate:
- Jan 26, 1961 (63 years old)
- Birthplace:
- Brantford
- Gender:
- Male
- Height:
- 5 ft 11 in (1.8288 m)
- Profession:
- Ice hockey player, Athlete, Coach
- Nationality:
- Canada
What Is Wayne Gretzky's Net Worth?
Wayne Gretzky is a Canadian-born retired professional hockey player and entrepreneur who has a net worth of $250 million. In the sports world, being the "greatest" is often a matter of opinion. Every new sports season, some athlete is crowned the new "greatest." However, there have been a few athletes who have dominated a sport so completely for an extended period of time that they are truly the "greatest." Babe Ruth, Michael Jordan, Kelly Slater, Nadia Comaneci, there are a handful of men and women, who have managed to redefine what is possible in their chosen sport. Wayne Gretzky is that person for the world of hockey.
The former NHL player from Brantford, Ontario, Canada, began skating when he was three and was playing hockey against ten-year-olds in Canada when he was just six. He eventually had to move away from his hometown to continue playing because regional fans were booing whenever he took the ice since his level of skill so eclipsed the other children around him. Wayne joined the World Hockey Association in 1978, and when it dissolved, he moved to the NHL, playing for the Edmonton Oilers, the Los Angeles Kings, the St. Louis Blues, and finally, the New York Rangers. Over the course of his 21 years as a player, he set a ridiculous number of records and won multiple awards, including scoring the most points in NHL history and being the only NHL player to score over 200 points in a season (and he did it four times). He also won nine Hart Trophies (MVP), 10 Art Ross Trophies (Most Points), and two Conn Smythe Trophies (Playoff MVP), among many other honors. Since retiring, he has served as the executive director of the Canadian National Hockey Team during their 2002 Olympic showing (they won the Gold medal), and he served as the Head Coach for the Phoenix Coyotes. Wayne also launched a highly successful entrepreneurial career which we detail later in this article. All of his success, endorsement deals, and business ventures, including co-owning a restaurant and a successful sports equipment line, have made him quite wealthy.
Career Earnings
During his NHL career, Wayne Gretzky earned a total of $46 million in NHL salary. He earned an additional $50 million from endorsements during his playing days. When combined, he earned around the same as $150 million after adjusting for inflation. He has invested his money very wisely, building an empire that today includes sports team ownership, a vineyard, real estate ventures, and more.
Early Life and Career Beginnings
Wayne Douglas Gretzky was born on January 26, 1961, in Brantford, Ontario. He has three brothers and a sister. His father, Walter, taught him, his siblings, and their friends how to play hockey on a homemade rink in the family home's backyard, and from an early age, Gretzky showed a natural talent. By age 6, he was already playing on a team otherwise composed of 10-year-olds, and he continued to garner attention as he progressed. His excelling on the ice often earned him negative attention from other players and jealous parents, so it was not uncommon for him to get booed during games.
In part to help him advance his career but also to help him escape the negative atmosphere of his hometown, his parents helped him move to Toronto to play hockey there. At the time, players were not allowed to play in different areas, but his parents challenged the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association and won, so he was allowed to play Junior B hockey with the Toronto Nationals, eventually earning Rookie of the Year in the Metro Junior B Hockey League for the 1975-76 season. Wayne eventually was drafted in the 1977 Ontario Major Junior Hockey League draft to play for the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds when he was 16.
Professional Hockey Career
In 1978, at the age of 17, Gretzky signed a $1.75 million USD seven-year personal services contract with the Indianapolis Racers in the World Hockey Association (WHA). He had to join the WHA instead of the NHL initially because the NHL did not allow the signing of players under the age of 20. He only played briefly for the Racers before being traded to the Edmonton Oilers. When his team joined the NHL after the WHA folded in 1979, he was instrumental in leading them to four Stanley Cup victories.
With the Oilers, Wayne earned the Hart Memorial Trophy as the NHL's Most Valuable Player in what was only his first NHL season. His star continued to rise, and he became the first player in NHL history to break the two hundred-point mark, scoring over 200 points in a season, among other achievements. He was traded two more times after that, also playing for the Los Angeles Kings (1988 – 1996) and the St. Louis Blues (1996). In 1996, he signed with the New York Rangers as a free agent on a two-year, $8 million USD contract.
He retired from his professional career in 1999 while playing for the New York Rangers. During the span of his career, Gretzky achieved nine Hart Trophies for most valuable player, ten Art Ross Trophies for most points in a season, five Lester B. Pearson awards, and two Conn Smythe Trophies as playoff MVP. He was immediately inducted into the NHL Hall of Fame following his retirement. When he retired from the NHL, he held an amazing 61 records. His #99 jersey was also retired league-wide, and he was the only person to receive this honor at the time.
Post-Retirement Engagements
After Gretzky's playing career was over, he moved into a management role and became the executive director of the Canadian National Men's Hockey Team for the 2002 Winter Olympics. He later became a part-owner of the NHL team the Phoenix Coyotes, buying a 10% stake in them in May 2000 in partnership with majority owner Steven Ellman. He went on to become the team's coach from October 2005 to September 2009. In 2016 he became vice-chairman and partner of Oilers Entertainment Group.
Business Ventures And Endorsements
In addition to being a professional athlete, Gretzky has invested heavily in the ownership of sports teams. He bought the Hull Olympiques team of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League in 1985 for $175,000 CAD and sold them in 1992 for $550,000 CAD. In 1991, when Bruce McNall purchased the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League, Gretzky was a minority owner along with John Candy; they eventually sold the team in 1994. He once again partnered with McNall to purchase a rare Honus Wagner T206 cigarette card for $451,000 USD, selling it later. Additionally, Gretzky is a partner in sports equipment manufacturer First Team Sports, as well as roller hockey rink operator Worldwide Roller Hockey, Inc.
Furthermore, Gretzky enjoyed many lucrative endorsement deals during his professional hockey career. By 1995, he was ranked one of the top five highest-paid athlete endorsers in North America, thanks to his deals with major global brands like Coca-Cola, Domino's Pizza, Sharp Corporation, and Upper Deck Company. Lastly, Gretzky partnered with Andrew Peller Ltd. in 2017 to open Wayne Gretzky Estates, a winery and distillery in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario. He also has restaurants such as No. 99 Gretzky's Wine & Whiskey at Edmonton International Airport (opened in 2016) and Studio 99 at Rogers Place in Edmonton, Canada (opened in 2018). In 2023, Wayne Gretzky CBD Gummies were launched.
Personal Life
Gretzky met actress Janet Jones while he was serving as a judge on the television show "Dance Fever." They began dating in 1987, he proposed in January 1988, and the couple got married in July that same year. Their wedding ceremony, which reportedly cost him over $1 million USD, was dubbed "The Royal Wedding" by the Canadian press. Together, the couple has five children: three sons and two daughters. Their son Trevor is a former minor league baseball player. One of their daughters, Paulina Gretzky, a singer and model, has been in a relationship with professional golfer Dustin Johnson since 2013, and they have two kids together. Paulina and Dustin married in April 2022.
Real Estate
In the late 1980s, soon after moving over to the LA Kings, Wayne purchased a large property in the exclusive Beverly Hills gated community of Beverly Park. He sold his house a few years later to a billionaire named Eric Smidt (not the Google billionaire Eric Schmidt). Smidt bought the vacant lot next door for $3 million, and in 2014, he sold the combined estate for $40 million.
In 2007, Wayne and his wife custom-built a mansion located within a gated country club in Thousand Oaks, California. Wayne Gretzky's house in Thousand Oaks is 10,815 square feet. It has two guest houses and sits on 6.5 acres of land in the very exclusive Sherwood Country Club community. Gretzky's house was designed by famed architect Richard Landry in close consultation with Wayne. The house features hardwood floors, plaster detailing, an open floor plan, a state-of-the-art kitchen, a home theater, an outdoor, wood-burning pizza oven, and a pool. The main house has six bedrooms and seven and a half bathrooms. Additionally, one of the guest houses has a full gym, and there is a sunken tennis court out back, as well.
The Gretzkys sold the house in 2014 to former baseball player Lenny Dykstra – who at this time was touting himself as a financial guru – for a mind-numbing $18.5 million.
A year later, the real estate market collapsed, as did Lenny's guru status. Lenny tried to sell the house for $18.5 million at what might have been the worst time in history to sell a house. He lowered the price over and over, eventually losing it in foreclosure after he declared bankruptcy and was arrested on fraud charges. To bring it all full circle, Wayne and Janet Gretzky re-acquired the house in 2018 for $13.5 million.
In October 2020, Wayne and Janet listed the coveted property for sale for $22.9 million.
In 2022, soon-to-be-son-in-law Dustin Johnson sold his North Palm Beach home in South Florida to the Gretzkys for $4.5 million.