Monday, November 17, 2025

Meta spent $27 million protecting Mark Zuckerberg last year, more than any other CEO

The targeted murder of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson last December put the business world on alert. Companies beyond the insurance and healthcare industries began ramping up security for founders and CEOs, worried that Thompson’s death (and some of the public’s reaction to it), along with rising cyberattacks and death threats, could increase real-world risks for any business leader.

Most Read from Fast Company

That has led to a substantial increase in security spending, and a new study from the Financial Times finds that no company is spending more to protect its CEO than Meta. Security spending was up more than 10% last year at the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, with $27 million spent to protect Mark Zuckerberg—$3 million more than in 2023.

“We believe that Mr. Zuckerberg’s role puts him in a unique position: He is synonymous with Meta and, as a result, negative sentiment regarding our company is directly associated with, and often transferred to, Mr. Zuckerberg,” the company says in its 2025 proxy statement.

Google parent Alphabet and Amazon also saw increases of more than 10% in protection costs last year. Altogether, the 10 major tech firms spent more than $45 million to protect their leaders. Meta’s spending, however, greatly surpassed all others. The next highest was Alphabet, which allocated $6.8 million to protect CEO Sundar Pichai. Coinbase spent nearly as much, dedicating $6.2 million to guard CEO Brian Armstrong.

The big question on many minds, though, is how much is being spent to protect Elon Musk, arguably the most polarizing of the tech CEOs. The answer isn’t entirely clear. Only one of his companies, Tesla, is public, and it disclosed spending $500,000 to protect Musk last year (down from $2.4 million in 2023). SpaceX and xAI are private and did not disclose figures. Musk also owns his own security company, Foundation Security—described as a mini Secret Service, run in part by a former Army Special Forces weapons sergeant.

While some companies have boosted spending, others have scaled back, perhaps due to onetime expenses in previous years. Here’s what other corporations reported.

  • Nvidia: $3.5 million to protect CEO Jensen Huang, up from $2.2 million in 2023

  • Apple: $1.4 million for Tim Cook, down from $2.4 million in 2023

  • Amazon: $1.1 million for CEO Andy Jassy, and $1.6 million for Jeff Bezos, an amount consistent for at least 15 years

  • Palo Alto Networks: $1.6 million for CEO Nikesh Arora, down from $3.5 million in 2023

  • JPMorgan Chase: $882,000 for CEO Jamie Dimon, up slightly from $866,000 in 2023

Source link

Latest Topics

Related Articles

spot_img