Future (Rapper) Net Worth

Future is an American rapper who has achieved immense success in the music industry. He is the first artist to ever have two back-to-back #1 albums on the Billboard charts, and has released several mixtapes and albums since 2010. His cousin introduced him to music and rapping, and his debut album 'Pluto' opened to positive reviews. He has since released two more albums, and in 2015, he achieved international success with his chartbursting album 'DS2' and mixtape 'What A Time To Be Alive'. With his universal influence and chart dominance, Future is seen as the 'Future' of music.
Future (Rapper) is a member of Singers

Age, Biography and Wiki

Who is it? Rapper
Birth Day November 20, 1983
Birth Place Kirkwood, Atlanta, Georgia, United States, United States
Age 40 YEARS OLD
Birth Sign Sagittarius
Other names Future Hendrix Meathead Nayvadius Cash
Occupation Rapper singer songwriter record producer
Partner(s) Ciara (2013–2014)
Children 4
Relatives Rico Wade (cousin)
Genres Hip hop trap mumble rap
Instruments Vocals
Years active 2003–present
Labels A1 Freebandz Epic
Associated acts Drake Gucci Mane Jeezy Lil Wayne Metro Boomin Mike Will Made It Rocko Ty Dolla Sign The Weeknd Young Scooter Young Thug Zaytoven
Website futurefreebandz.com

💰 Net worth: $50 Million (2024)

Future (Rapper), the renowned and talented rapper is projected to have a net worth of $50 million by the year 2024. With his effortless flow and groundbreaking musical style, Future has solidified his place as one of the most influential figures in the American rap scene. Throughout his career, he has consistently delivered chart-topping hits and collaborated with some of the biggest names in the music industry. Future's contributions to the genre have garnered him tremendous success, accolades, and a loyal fanbase. With such accomplishments, it is no surprise that his net worth is estimated to reach a staggering $50 million in the near future.

Some Future (Rapper) images

Biography/Timeline

1973

Created by Dick Clark in 1973, the American Music Awards is an annual music awards ceremony and one of several major annual American music awards shows. Future has received two nominations.

1983

Nayvadius DeMun Wilburn was born on November 20, 1983 in Atlanta, Georgia. He began using his stage name while performing as one of the members of the musical collective The Dungeon Family, where he was nicknamed "The Future". His first cousin, record Producer, and Dungeon Family member Rico Wade, encouraged him to sharpen his writing skills and pursue a career as a Rapper. He attended Columbia High School. Future voices his praise of Wade's musical influence and instruction, calling him the "mastermind" behind his sound. He soon came under the wing of Atlanta's own Rocko who signed him to his label A-1 Recordings. Since then his work ethic has driven him to his success. From 2010 to early 2011, Future released a series of mixtapes including 1000, Dirty Sprite and True Story. The latter included the single "Tony Montana", in reference to the Scarface film. During that time, Future was also partnering with Rapper Gucci Mane on their collaborative album Free Bricks, and co-wrote YC's single "Racks".

1984

The MTV Video Music Awards were established in 1984 by MTV to celebrate the top music videos of the year. Future has been nominated one time.

2001

The BET Awards were established in 2001 by the Black Entertainment Television network to celebrate African Americans and other individuals in music, acting, Sports, and other fields of entertainment over the past year.

2011

Future signed a major label recording contract with Epic Records fellow American Rapper Rocko's A1 Recordings, in September 2011, days before the release of his next mixtape, Streetz Calling. The mixtape was described by XXL magazine as ranging from "simple and soundly executed boasts" to "futuristic drinking and drugging jams" to "tales of the grind". A Pitchfork review remarked that on the mixtape Future comes "as close as anyone to perfecting this thread of ringtone pop, where singing and rapping are practically the same thing, and conversing 100% through Auto-Tune doesn't mean you still can't talk about how you used to sell drugs. It would almost feel antiquated if Future weren't amassing hits, or if he weren't bringing some subtle new dimensions to the micro-genre."

2012

It was announced that Future will be repackaging his debut album Pluto on November 27, 2012 under the name Pluto 3D featuring 3 new songs and 2 remix songs including the remix for "Same Damn Time" featuring Diddy and Ludacris, as well as his newest street single "Neva End (Remix)" featuring Kelly Rowland. In 2012, Future wrote, produced and was featured on "Loveeeeeee Song" taken from Barbadian singer Rihanna's seventh studio album Unapologetic.

2013

The album's lead single, "Karate Chop" featuring Casino, premiered on January 25, 2013, and was sent to urban radio on January 29, 2013. The song is produced by Metro Boomin. The official remix, which features Lil Wayne, was sent radio and was released on iTunes on February 19, 2013. On August 7, 2013, Future changed the title of his second album from Future Hendrix to Honest and announced that it would be released on November 26, 2013. It was later revealed that the album would be pushed back to April 22, 2014, as it was said that Future has tour dates with Drake on Would You Like A Tour?. In December 2013, it was announced that Future would make a guest appearance on Kat Dahlia's upcoming debut, My Garden. Future released DS2 on July 16, 2015.

2014

Future has four children with four different women: Jessica Smith, Brittni Mealy, India J, and singer Ciara. He was engaged to Ciara in October 2013, but Ciara called off the engagement in August 2014 due to his infidelity, though Future denies cheating on Ciara. Their son, Future Zahir Wilburn, was born on May 19, 2014.

2015

On September 20, 2015, Future released a collaborative mixtape with Canadian Rapper Drake, titled What a Time to Be Alive. The album debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, Billboard R&B Charts, and Billboard Hot Rap Songs, marking the first time a Rapper was able to score two number one albums in a year, in 11 years, since Jay Z back in 2004. The mixtape has sold over 334,000 copies in the U.S. On January 17, 2016, Future released another mixtape, titled Purple Reign, with executive production from Metro Boomin and DJ Esco, as well as beat credits from Southside, Zaytoven and more. On February 5, 2016, Future premiered his fourth studio album, EVOL, on DJ Khaled's debut episode of the Beats 1 radio show We The Best. In 2016, Future became the fastest Artist to chart three number-one albums on the Billboard 200 since Glee Soundtrack albums in 2010.

2016

As of 2016, Future is being sued by both Jessica Smith and Ciara. Smith is suing him for failing to pay child support, and stated that their son "suffers from emotional and behavioral issues stemming from Future's neglect as a father". Ciara is suing him for defamation, slander, and libel. In October 2016, a judge said that Future's string of tweets bashing Ciara did not relate to the $15 million she was asking for.

2017

On Valentine's Day 2017, Future announced via Instagram that his self-titled fifth studio album would be released on February 17, 2017. Exactly one week later, he would release his sixth studio album titled Hndrxx. Both albums went number one consecutively, which made Future the first Artist to debut two albums at number one at the same time on the Billboard 200 and Canadian Albums Chart. He, along with Ed Sheeran, collaborated with pop musician Taylor Swift on the song "End Game" from her album Reputation. The song peaked at number 18 on Billboard 100 and was Future's eighth top 20 hit.

2019

Future makes prevalent use of Auto-Tune in his songs, both rapping and singing with the effect. Pitchfork Media wrote that Future "miraculously shows that it's still possible for Auto-Tune to be an interesting artistic tool", stating that he "finds a multitude of ways for the software to accentuate and color emotion". GQ stated that he "has managed to reboot the tired auto-tune sound and mash it into something entirely new", writing that he "combines it with a bizarro croon to synthesize how he feels, then [...] stretches and deteriorates his words until they’re less like words, more like raw Energy and reactive emotions". The LA Times wrote that "Future’s highly processed vocals suggest a man driven to bleary desperation by drugs or love or technology", stating that his music "comes closest to conjuring the numbing overstimulation of our time".