Alice Walton didn’t build her fortune from scratch. But she didn’t sit back and coast either. As the only daughter of Walmart founder Sam Walton, she inherited a hefty slice of the retail giant. But what she did with that wealth tells a much bigger story.
Her fortune now sits north of $100 billion. Sure, the base came from Walmart stock, but Alice, now 76, has carved her own lane through art, health, education, and a low-key but powerful presence outside the spotlight.
It Started With Walmart!
Sam Walton set things up smart. He created a family partnership, Walton Enterprises, to keep the company in the family and avoid huge estate taxes. Alice and her brothers, Rob and Jim, each inherited a major piece of this pie. That partnership still controls about 45% of Walmart’s stock.

The News / When Walmart’s stock shot up in 2024, all three siblings (including Alice) crossed into "centi-billionaire" status.
The company’s growth came from expanding online, staying ahead of inflation, and pushing into new global markets. Alice’s fortune moved with it, but that is not where the story ends.
Alice Built Her Own Career Before Going Big on Giving
Before stepping into philanthropy, Alice built her own path. She started in finance, working as an equity analyst and broker. In 1988, she launched her own investment firm, the Llama Company. She didn’t just fund it, she ran it as CEO and chairwoman.
In 1998, she played a major role in launching the Northwest Arkansas Regional Airport. She gave $15 million in seed money, and her company underwrote the bond. That airport transformed the region and proved Alice knew how to use money to make things happen.
However, Alice’s heart beats for art. Not just buying it, but sharing it. She began collecting as a kid and turned that passion into a cultural force. In 2011, she opened the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in her hometown of Bentonville, Arkansas.
She has made headlines for buying iconic works like Asher B. Durand’s Kindred Spirits for $35 million and Georgia O’Keeffe’s Jimson Weed for $44.4 million. In 2019, she snapped up Robert Rauschenberg’s Buffalo II for $88.8 million. Critics rolled their eyes, but she stayed focused.
In 2017, she launched Art Bridges, a foundation that helps smaller museums across the U.S. borrow and display American art. It is a quiet move, but a powerful one.
Now She is Fixing Healthcare, Too
Alice doesn’t just want to show you art, she wants you to live better. In 2019, she founded the Whole Health Institute to change how we think about medicine. It is not your usual hospital model. It focuses on whole-body wellness, prevention, and lifestyle.

GTN / Alice has launched the Alice L. Walton School of Medicine. It is a non-profit school aimed at flipping medical training on its head.
Her goal is to blend science with compassion, teaching doctors to treat the whole person, not just symptoms.
Alice keeps things private, but that hasn’t kept the spotlight away. She has been married twice and has no kids. For years, she lived on a Texas ranch breeding horses. Riding was her escape and her passion.
In 2020, she moved back to Bentonville to be closer to Crystal Bridges and her growing network of projects. She has had her share of controversy, including a fatal car crash in the '80s, though no charges were filed. She rarely speaks to the media and doesn’t chase headlines. But when she acts, it makes waves.