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The $100,000 CEO: Buffett's Successor Gets a 250x Salary Bump at Berkshire Hathaway

MarketDash Editorial Team
8 hours ago
Warren Buffett famously refused raises for over 40 years as Berkshire Hathaway CEO, keeping his salary at $100,000. His successor Greg Abel? He's starting at $25 million, marking a dramatic shift in how the conglomerate compensates its top executive.

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When Frugality Meets Reality

Warren Buffett's tenure as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK.A)(BRK.B) ended in late 2025, and with it came the end of one of corporate America's most unusual compensation arrangements. For more than four decades, the Oracle of Omaha collected a modest $100,000 annual salary while building one of the world's most valuable companies. His successor, Greg Abel, is taking a different approach to the pay question.

Berkshire recently disclosed that Abel will receive a base salary of $25 million in his new role. That's 250 times what Buffett earned, though to be fair, Buffett's compensation structure was always more philosophical statement than market-rate arrangement.

Abel Steps Into Legendary Shoes

Abel comes to the CEO role after leading Berkshire's energy and non-insurance businesses as Vice Chairman, a position that paid him $21 million in 2024. He's not exactly new to the company or its operations, but replacing someone who took control of the business in 1965 and turned it into an investing powerhouse creates certain expectations.

Beyond his salary, Abel has skin in the game. A 2025 filing showed he owns 228 Class A shares and 2,363 Class B shares of Berkshire. Meanwhile, Buffett owned 206,359 Class A shares and 951 Class B shares as of March 5, 2025, representing 37.9% of Class A shares at that time.

Buffett, now the 10th richest person globally with a net worth of $150 billion according to Bloomberg, has pledged to give away the majority of his fortune. He's been systematically doing exactly that for years.

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The Buffett Compensation Philosophy

Here's the thing about Buffett's $100,000 salary: it wasn't an oversight or temporary situation. A Berkshire filing explicitly states that "due to Mr. Buffett's desire that his compensation remain unchanged, the Committee has not proposed an increase in Mr. Buffett's compensation since the Committee was created in 2004." The salary had already been frozen for decades before that committee even existed.

The company did cover Buffett's personal and home security costs, which totaled $305,111 in 2024. But that's where the perks ended. No company car. No corporate jet for personal use. And in perhaps the most Buffett detail imaginable, he actually reimbursed Berkshire at year-end for personal postage and delivery fees that weren't business-related.

Unlike most major corporations that layer stock options and equity compensation on top of base salaries, Berkshire keeps it simple: salary and certain necessary costs. That's it.

The company's compensation philosophy extends beyond just Buffett. A filing states that "the Committee has established a policy that neither the profitability of Berkshire nor the market value of its stock are to be considered in the compensation of any executive officer." It's a striking departure from the performance-based pay structures that dominate modern corporate governance.

Buffett's frugality wasn't limited to his Berkshire compensation. He's famously lived in the same Omaha home for decades, embodying the value-investing principles that made him legendary. Whether Abel maintains that same aesthetic remains to be seen, but at $25 million annually, he's at least being paid closer to what the market thinks a Fortune 10 CEO should earn.

The $100,000 CEO: Buffett's Successor Gets a 250x Salary Bump at Berkshire Hathaway

MarketDash Editorial Team
8 hours ago
Warren Buffett famously refused raises for over 40 years as Berkshire Hathaway CEO, keeping his salary at $100,000. His successor Greg Abel? He's starting at $25 million, marking a dramatic shift in how the conglomerate compensates its top executive.

Get Market Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS alerts

When Frugality Meets Reality

Warren Buffett's tenure as CEO of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK.A)(BRK.B) ended in late 2025, and with it came the end of one of corporate America's most unusual compensation arrangements. For more than four decades, the Oracle of Omaha collected a modest $100,000 annual salary while building one of the world's most valuable companies. His successor, Greg Abel, is taking a different approach to the pay question.

Berkshire recently disclosed that Abel will receive a base salary of $25 million in his new role. That's 250 times what Buffett earned, though to be fair, Buffett's compensation structure was always more philosophical statement than market-rate arrangement.

Abel Steps Into Legendary Shoes

Abel comes to the CEO role after leading Berkshire's energy and non-insurance businesses as Vice Chairman, a position that paid him $21 million in 2024. He's not exactly new to the company or its operations, but replacing someone who took control of the business in 1965 and turned it into an investing powerhouse creates certain expectations.

Beyond his salary, Abel has skin in the game. A 2025 filing showed he owns 228 Class A shares and 2,363 Class B shares of Berkshire. Meanwhile, Buffett owned 206,359 Class A shares and 951 Class B shares as of March 5, 2025, representing 37.9% of Class A shares at that time.

Buffett, now the 10th richest person globally with a net worth of $150 billion according to Bloomberg, has pledged to give away the majority of his fortune. He's been systematically doing exactly that for years.

Get Market Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS (optional)

The Buffett Compensation Philosophy

Here's the thing about Buffett's $100,000 salary: it wasn't an oversight or temporary situation. A Berkshire filing explicitly states that "due to Mr. Buffett's desire that his compensation remain unchanged, the Committee has not proposed an increase in Mr. Buffett's compensation since the Committee was created in 2004." The salary had already been frozen for decades before that committee even existed.

The company did cover Buffett's personal and home security costs, which totaled $305,111 in 2024. But that's where the perks ended. No company car. No corporate jet for personal use. And in perhaps the most Buffett detail imaginable, he actually reimbursed Berkshire at year-end for personal postage and delivery fees that weren't business-related.

Unlike most major corporations that layer stock options and equity compensation on top of base salaries, Berkshire keeps it simple: salary and certain necessary costs. That's it.

The company's compensation philosophy extends beyond just Buffett. A filing states that "the Committee has established a policy that neither the profitability of Berkshire nor the market value of its stock are to be considered in the compensation of any executive officer." It's a striking departure from the performance-based pay structures that dominate modern corporate governance.

Buffett's frugality wasn't limited to his Berkshire compensation. He's famously lived in the same Omaha home for decades, embodying the value-investing principles that made him legendary. Whether Abel maintains that same aesthetic remains to be seen, but at $25 million annually, he's at least being paid closer to what the market thinks a Fortune 10 CEO should earn.