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You ever notice how Mike Tyson's financial journey is basically a Hollywood script? The man went from absolutely dominating the boxing world to filing for bankruptcy, then somehow managed to turn it all around. It's wild when you really think about it.
Back in the 1990s, Tyson was literally the king of the ring. During his peak years, he was pulling in $30 million per fight—absolutely insane money for that era. We're talking about someone who earned over $400 million across his entire boxing career, fighting legends like Evander Holyfield and Lennox Lewis. At that point in the 1990s, Tyson's net worth trajectory seemed unstoppable. He was one of the richest athletes on the planet, living like royalty with mansions, exotic cars, and even tigers.
But here's where it gets interesting. All that money didn't stick around. Poor decisions, bad management, legal issues, and honestly just living way too lavishly caught up with him. By 2003, despite having earned hundreds of millions, Tyson had to file for bankruptcy. That's the kind of fall that would break most people.
What's impressive though is what happened next. Instead of disappearing, Tyson reinvented himself. He got into entertainment—did a successful one-man show called "Mike Tyson: Undisputed Truth," appeared in movies like "The Hangover," scored endorsement deals. Then in 2020, he actually got back in the ring for an exhibition match against Roy Jones Jr., and that pay-per-view event reportedly made over $80 million globally. That's not bad for a comeback fight.
But the real move? Cannabis. Tyson co-founded Tyson 2.0, a cannabis brand that's apparently worth over $100 million now. The guy basically found a new empire.
So where does that leave him? Current estimates put Mike Tyson's net worth at around $10 million in 2025. Yeah, it's a fraction of what he once had, but the interesting part is how he got there—not through one massive payday, but through diversifying and staying relevant. He's living more quietly in Las Vegas now, focused on his business ventures rather than the excess. It's actually a pretty solid comeback story when you look at the whole arc.