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He's earned his fortune through a hip-hop career spanning nearly three decades and has also parlayed his success into several business ventures.
They include entertainment labels, a clothing line, alcohol brands, an upscale sports club, and a $600 million streaming service.
With a net worth of $900 million, Jay-Z is one of the wealthiest musicians in the world.
The rapper has earned millions from sellout tours and chart-topping albums over the course of his nearly 30-year career.
But music is far from his only money-making venture. Over the years, Jay-Z has parlayed his success in the hip-hop world into a fortune earned as an entrepreneur. His ventures include entertainment labels, a clothing line, upscale alcohol brands, and the music-streaming service Tidal.
Read on to see how Jay-Z has earned - and multiplied - his fortune.
"The burden of poverty isn't just that you don't always have the things you need," Jay-Z told NPR in 2010. "It's the feeling of being embarrassed every day of your life, and you'd do anything to lift that burden."
Unable to find a major record-label deal, Jay-Z founded Roc-A-Fella Records in 1995 with friends Damon Dash and Kareem Burke. Jay-Z's debut album "Reasonable Doubt" a year later turned the rapper into a rising star.
Jay-Z released several chart-topping albums in the late 1990s and early 2000s, turning him into an international superstar and earning him millions of dollars.
Jay-Z dipped his feet in the world of sports business in 2003 when he bought a small percentage of the New Jersey Nets. He had an outsize influence on the NBA team and pushed to revamp its branding upon its move to Brooklyn in 2012. He sold his portion of the team the next year.
Jay-Z rakes in even more money from Armand de Brignac, the brand of champagne he bought in 2014. He's also the partial owner of D'Usse, a cognac made by Bacardi.
Jay-Z's success has transformed him into a brand unto himself. His lyrics often allude to his brand, like in 2005, when he rapped, "I'm not a businessman, I'm a business, man."
"My brands are an extension of me," Jay-Z told Men's Health in 2010. "The clothes are an extension of me. The music is an extension of me. All my businesses are part of the culture, so I have to stay true to whatever I'm feeling at the time, whatever direction I'm heading in. And hopefully, everyone follows."
They have three children together, and they aren't afraid of spoiling them: For daughter Blue Ivy's first birthday, they reportedly gave her a diamond-encrusted Barbie doll worth $80,000, and in 2016 they spent $11,000 on her dress for the MTV Video Music Awards.
In 2012 the couple reportedly rented a $400,000-a-month, 11-acre home in the Hamptons equipped with a movie theater, bowling alley, walk-in fridge, eight-car garage, and a 60-foot heated pool with an underwater stereo system.
Despite his forays into the business world, Jay-Z isn't done making music. In 2017 he released his 13th studio album, "4:44," to widespread acclaim.
In one memorable lyric from the album, Jay-Z laments wasting money on cars earlier in his career instead of investing in real estate in his native Brooklyn, where property values are skyrocketing: "I bought every V12 engine, wish I could take it back to the beginnin', I could have bought a place in Dumbo before it was Dumbo for like 2 million. That same building today is worth 25 million. Guess how I'm feelin'? Dumbo."
In the same song, he brags about another successful investment: He's purchased numerous works of art that have since increased in value, like the $4.5 million painting by Jean-Michel Basquiat he bought in 2013.