How Rich Is Savannah Guthrie? Today Co-Anchor's Net Worth Revealed After Offering $1M for Missing Mum's Return
A $1 million reward has put Guthrie's finances under a harsher spotlight as her family pleads for help to find her missing mother, Nancy.

Savannah Guthrie's net worth has shifted from celebrity curiosity to a live news angle in the United States after the Today co-anchor offered a $1 million reward in New York on Wednesday, 24 February, for information that could lead to the safe return of her missing mother, Nancy.
The reward has sharpened attention on Guthrie's finances, even as online estimates of her wealth spread widely, even though she has not publicly confirmed a figure.
Three points are clear as Guthrie's family is publicly pleading for help in finding Nancy. A $1 million reward is now part of that plea. Alongside it, estimates of Guthrie's wealth are circulating, though they are not formally certified by Guthrie herself.
Savannah Guthrie Net Worth And The Numbers Behind It
Celebrity Net Worth, a site that tracks famous fortunes using publicly available information and industry reporting, puts Guthrie's net worth at an estimated $40 million, a number that has been repeated across entertainment coverage. Guthrie has not publicly certified that figure.
Guthrie has never disclosed her Today salary, though multiple reports estimate she makes around $8 million per year from the programme alone.
Guthrie is reported to have a multimillion-dollar condominium in Tribeca, bought in 2012, and a second property acquired in 2017. She and her husband, Michael Feldman, also reportedly paid $11.35 million for a 4,500 square foot townhouse in Brooklyn Heights.
Savannah Guthrie Net Worth Was Built The Hard Way
Guthrie's story is the one built across smaller jobs and harder years. She was born on 27 December 1971 in Australia and later earned a Juris Doctor from Georgetown University Law Center after graduating from the University of Arizona with a Bachelor of Arts in journalism.
She has said it was only in college that journalism properly took hold. In a Today segment in January 2022, she talked about the moment she left home at 21 after receiving a job offer at the NBC affiliate KTVM in Butte, Montana, and the emotional cost of going. The memory is anchored in what her mother said, and it now reads like a line with a second life.
'When I moved to Butte, Mont., this was it, and it was really hard for me to leave her. And that's when she said, "If you can't leave me, then I didn't do my job right, Savannah",' Guthrie said. 'She just gave me permission to go, you know? She could have held onto me. It wouldn't have taken very much. If she said, "Well, you know, Savannah, maybe you could find something a little closer to home..."'
After local work at ABC and NBC affiliates, Guthrie became a national trial correspondent for CourtTV from 2004 to 2006, a role that rewarded legal fluency and a tolerance for grim detail. By 2007, she was working for NBC News as a legal analyst and correspondent, later serving as NBC News legal correspondent and NBC White House correspondent before taking up her full-time role on Today.
Away from broadcasting, Guthrie has published Mostly What God Does: Reflections on Seeking and Finding His Love Everywhere and two children's books, Princesses Wear Pants and Princesses Save the World.
Guthrie has put her career on hold while her mother remains missing and that she has offered the $1 million reward for information. For now, the reward remains the most concrete detail in a story still missing the one outcome her family is asking for: Nancy's safe return.
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