Elizabeth Holmes, 30
Forbes estimated Holmes to be worth $4.5 billion at age 30, in 2014, due to the massive valuation of her blood testing startup, Theranos. At the time, she was the youngest woman to become a self-made billionaire — and remained so until Jenner's recent triumph.
In 2016, Forbes dropped its estimate of Holmes' net worth to zero, due to allegations of fraud at Theranos.
Patrick Collison, 28
Patrick Collison joined the elite ranks of people who become billionaires before turning 30 at age 28 in 2016. Stripe, an online payments company founded by Collison and his brother John, reached a $9.2 billion valuation after raising $150 million from Alphabet's investment division, pushing both brothers into billionaire range.
Bobby Murphy, 27
Snapchat cofounder Murphy passed the billionaire mark in 2015 at age 27, according to Forbes.
Dustin Moskovitz, 26
Moskovitz made Forbes' billionaires list for the first time in 2010, at the age of 26. While Moskovitz left Facebook in 2008, after serving as the first chief technology officer, his 6% stake in Facebook was almost entirely responsible for his place on the list.
John Collison, 26
John Collison was two years younger than his brother, Patrick, when both became billionaires in 2016.
Evan Spiegel, 25
The Snapchat CEO and co-founder was just 25 when he first earned a spot on Forbes' billionaires list in 2015.
Mark Zuckerberg, 23
Prior to this week, the Facebook cofounder and CEO was the youngest self-made billionaire, reaching $1 billion in 2008 at age 23.
Kylie Jenner, 21
Forbes estimated that Kylie Cosmetics, the company Jenner runs and owns, is worth $900 million.