Tom Brady Net Worth

In total, Tom Brady is estimated to have a net worth total of $250 million.
American Football personality Tom Brady, a spokesman for the NFL and a businessman, is a household name in the United States. Tom Brady net worth is currently $250 million. Gisele Bundchen, the supermodel who has a fortune of $400 million, is not included in his net worth. Tom and his wife Gisele have a combined net worth of $650 million. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady is the most successful NFL player of all time, having appeared in nine championship games with the New England team and winning six of those championships. Over the course of a successful decade in football, he has amassed an impressive collection of MVP honors, including four Super Bowl titles and three NFL titles.
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Tom Brady Net Worth: Salary
Adding to Tom Brady net worth is his salary of $30 million per year. When Tom played for the Patriots from 2000 to 2019, he earned $230 million in salary alone. From endorsements, he made an additional $100 million in the same time period Gisele Bündchen’s career earnings peaked at nearly $500 million during the same time period.


Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ two-year contract is worth at least $280 million in salary and $140 million in endorsements. To put it another way, Tom Brady net worth is on pace to grow more than $420 million in career earnings.
Biography
Thomas Edward Patrick Brady Jr. was born on August 3, 1977, in San Mateo, California, to Galynn Patricia and Thomas Brady Sr., the only son and fourth child of the couple. In addition to his three older sisters (Nancy, Julie, and Maureen), he was also raised Catholic. His father is from Ireland, while his mother is from Germany, Norway, Poland, and Sweden. After fleeing the Great Famine in Ireland, Brady’s father’s two great-great grandparents John and Bridget Brady relocated from Boston to San Francisco before the American Civil War. In addition to Bridget and Lawrence Meegan, the parents of “Steady” Pete Meegan, Ann Meegan and her husband accompanied them. During World War II, Brady’s great-uncle Michael Buckley Jr. became the nation’s first POW.


Brady was a big fan of San Francisco 49ers quarterback Joe Montana back in the 1980s when the team played at Candlestick Park. Brady described Montana as an idol and an inspiration to him at the time. Brady was just four years old when he witnessed Dwight Clark make The Catch in the 1981 NFC Championship game against the Dallas Cowboys. Brady was taught to throw the football by camp counselor and future NFL/AFL quarterback Tony Graziani when he was a child at the College of San Mateo football camp.
In 1995, Brady graduated from Junipero Serra High School in San Mateo. In high school, he participated in not only football, but also basketball, and baseball, among other sports. During his time at Bellarmine College Preparatory, he faced football and baseball rival Pat Burrell. It wasn’t long before Brady became the Padres JV team’s second-choice quarterback. To begin with, Brady wasn’t good enough to start for the 0–8 JV team, which had failed to score a winning touchdown in the entire year. When the team’s starting quarterback went down with an injury, Brady stepped in. In his junior year, he was appointed the varsity starter and remained in that role until he graduated. At the end of Brady’s high school career, he was hoping to get noticed by college football coaches. He compiled a list of schools he was interested in and sent them highlight reels. There was a lot of interest from football teams across the country as a result.
The years 1995 to 1999 were spent by Brady at the University of Michigan as a football player. Brady labored the next two years as a backup QB while Brian Griese led the 1997 Wolverines to not only an undefeated season, but a share of the national championship as well. This culminated in a victory in the Rose Bowl.
After Michigan had a 35–3 lead over UCLA in the fourth quarter on September 28, 1996, Brady made his collegiate debut. He threw an interception, which Phillip Ward returned for a touchdown and a gain of 42 yards.
Brady and Drew Henson fought for the starting job under Michigan head coach Lloyd Carr, and Brady eventually started every game in 1998 and 1999. Two years in a row, Brady was an All-Big Ten honorable mention and captain of the team.


A total of 214 passes were attempted and completed by him in his first season as Michigan’s starting quarterback. Michigan lost 31–16 to Ohio State in 1998, a season in which the Wolverines shared the Big Ten Conference championship. As a way to cap off his sophomore campaign, Brady defeated Arkansas 45–31 in the Citrus Bowl.
Coming out of college, Brady was considered a low-profile prospect, and his lackluster showing at the NFL Scouting Combine only served to cement that perception. Consequently, he was selected by the New England Patriots in the sixth round of the 2000 NFL Draft, 199th overall, and as the seventh quarterback taken in that year’s draft. Work ethic, competitiveness, pocket awareness, and intelligence have all been cited as reasons for Brady’s success as a passer.
Tom Brady has started the most NFL games (316 regular season and 47 postseason) than any other quarterback in history. He spent his first 20 NFL seasons loyally playing with the Patriots, which is the most for a quarterback with a single team. He’s been with the Buccaneers since 2020. In 20 of his seasons, he has been the primary starter, but he was a backup in his rookie season and was out for nearly the entire 2008 season with a knee injury. Brady has only missed a season due to injury once before, in 2008. In 2002, the first year he started and played all 16 games of the regular season, Brady missed the playoffs by a single game. Brady led the Patriots to 17 AFC East championships during his time with the team. Buccaneers missed playoffs only once as a division winner under his guidance in 2020; however, the following year, the Buccaneers won their first NFC South title under his guidance.
Tom Brady Net Worth: Super Bowl Success
Patriots quarterback Tom Brady has led his team to nine Super Bowls. Six were theirs. During four of those, he was named MVP. As a Buccaneer, he also won a championship and was named the game’s MVP. He has gained lots of admiration from his colleagues and fans and has also received some nice rewards.


There are bonuses for making it to the Super Bowl, as well as the additional bonus of winning, are a result of the victory. It cost $63,000 for the 2001 season and $68,000 for the 2003 and 2004 Super Bowls, respectively. In 2014, he was paid $97,000, and in 2016, he was paid $107,000 for the overtime victory over Atlanta. In February 2019, he earned $118,000 after the Patriots easily defeated the Los Angeles Rams in the AFC Championship Game. These six Super Bowl wins have netted $521,000 in bonus money. All of this well-earned money certainly adds to Tom Brady net worth.
Controversy
NFL released a 243-page report on the deflation of footballs used in the AFC Championship Game on May 6, 2015. The report concluded that Brady, at the very least, was aware of the deliberate deflation of footballs. According to “substantial and credible evidence” that Brady was aware that Patriots employees were deflating footballs, Brady was suspended for four games by the NFL on May 11th. In a letter to Brady that same day, NFL Executive Vice President of Football Operations Troy Vincent wrote: “Your actions as set forth in the report clearly constitute conduct detrimental to the integrity of the game of professional football and public confidence in the sport.” After the suspension was handed down on May 14, Brady filed an appeal with the NFL Players Association.
Brady’s four-game suspension was also upheld by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell on July 28. A key factor in Goodell’s decision to uphold Brady’s suspension was the destruction of Brady’s cell phone. According to the NFL, Roger Goodell’s decision has been confirmed by papers filed in federal court. A statement on Brady’s Facebook page expressed his dissatisfaction with and criticism of Goodell’s decision to uphold the suspension and granted permission to the NFL Players Association to file an appeal with a federal court.
The initial punishment drew a mixed response from the public. Writer Mike Freeman for Bleacher Report expressed his support for Roger Goodell’s decision, saying the penalties were “brutal, but it deserved to be.” Several analysts also suggested that the severity of the punishment may have been influenced by the Patriots’ previous reputation as a team known for breaking the rules. “Firm but fair” was how others described the punishment.


In a landmark decision handed down on September 3rd, US District Court Judge Richard M. Berman lifted Brady’s four-game suspension, allowing him to play in the 2015 NFL season’s opening four games. Judge Berman cited the NFL’s failure to give Brady adequate notice of the charges against him and the possibility of a suspension in his decision. As a result of Brady’s testimony at the appeal hearing being “manipulated” by Goodell, post-appeal commentary also criticized Goodell’s decision.
Relationships
Actress Bridget Moynahan was Brady’s ex-girlfriend from 2004 until the end of 2006. The news of Moynahan’s pregnancy with Brady’s child was confirmed by People magazine on February 18, 2007. Brady and Moynahan called it quits around the time of Moynahan’s pregnancy in early December 2006. In August 2006, their son, John Edward Thomas Moynahan was born.
Gisele Bündchen, a Brazilian supermodel, began dating Brady in December of that year and it all happend due to help from a mutual friend who brought them together for a blind date. A small ceremony at Santa Monica’s St. Monica Catholic Church marked Brady and Bündchen’s nuptials on February 26, 2009. A 2nd wedding ceremony was held in Costa Rica in April 2009. Both of their children were born in the year of 2009, and their son was born in 2010.
All net worth information is collected and calculated from public information. When possible, we also incorporate private tips and comments submitted by the celebrities or their representatives. While we do our best to ensure that our figures are correct, they are only estimates unless otherwise stated. We welcome any refinements or criticism using the comment section below.