Nearly one million people worldwide became millionaires in 2025, UBS report finds


The UBS logo is pictured on a building next to the Federal Palace of Switzerland, in Bern, Switzerland, December 11, 2025. REUTERS/Pierre Albouy

ZURICH, June 30 (Reuters) - ⁠Personal wealth in 2025 grew at its ⁠fastest pace in years, creating nearly one ‌million new U.S. dollar millionaires worldwide, Swiss bank UBS said in its annual Global Wealth Report published on Tuesday.

Here ​are some details:

• Total personal ⁠wealth globally rose by ⁠10.8% last year, up from 4.6% in 2024 ⁠and ‌4.2% in 2023, as strong financial markets boosted growth, UBS found.

• There were "more ⁠millionaires than ever, everywhere" in 2025, the ​bank said. ‌The United States, where over 440,000 people ⁠became new ​U.S. dollar millionaires, accounted for almost half of this growth.

• Wealth in U.S. dollar terms grew ⁠disproportionately quickly in Europe, largely due ​to last year's depreciation of the dollar compared to the euro, UBS found.

• While average wealth ⁠rose, inequality has deepened since 2020, UBS said. Median wealth, which better reflects the middle of the scale, declined in most countries, highlighting a ​growing divide between the wealthiest ⁠and the broader population, the bank added.

• For ​the report, UBS analysed 56 ‌markets it estimates to ​represent over 92% of the world's wealth.

(Reporting by Ariane Luthi; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

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