Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky: Hitting a $100 Billion Valuation ‘Became the Saddest Day of My Life’

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By Joel South Published

Quick Read

  • The morning after Airbnb hit a $100 billion valuation, Brian Chesky called it the saddest day of his life. His reason exposes a flaw in how most people structure their retirement plan. See Chesky's warning →

  • There's a psychological pattern, backed by decades of research, that quietly erodes the payoff of every financial milestone you hit. Most retirement plans are built as if it doesn't exist. See the research →

  • Working five extra years to hit a bigger retirement number has a measurable cost, and the math on what you actually get in return is more uncomfortable than most planners admit. Check the uncomfortable math →

  • This lesson is genuinely dangerous advice for one specific group of retirement savers. Do you know which side of the line you're on? Find out which side you're on →

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Airbnb didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky: Hitting a $100 Billion Valuation ‘Became the Saddest Day of My Life’

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Here is the retirement insight most planners miss: the dollar target you are chasing will feel like nothing the morning after you hit it. Hit $1 million, $2 million or whatever the target happens to be, and life is supposed to feel different. Airbnb (NASDAQ:ABNB | ABNB Price Prediction) co-founder Brian Chesky just torched that assumption from the inside.

The Quote That Should Reframe Your Retirement Number

Speaking on the “Invest Like the Best” podcast, episode 470 (“AI Founder Mode”), Chesky described the morning after Airbnb’s December 2020 IPO catapulted the company past a $100 billion valuation:

“We go public, we have a $100 billion valuation. It’s like one of the best days of my life. And the next day I wake up, I put on sweatpants, I go on a Zoom meeting. It was like it never happened. And it became the saddest day of my life because I realized, okay, what now? I got all this adulation and I don’t feel any different.”

What he wanted was a mission and love, something a market cap cannot deliver. Adulation, in his words, was “like a cup with a hole at the bottom” that never fills.

The stakes for the average reader are real. If you spend 30 years grinding toward a single dollar figure and wake up the next morning feeling exactly the same, you have not just lost time. You have built a plan that ignored the variable that actually drives life satisfaction.

The Verdict: Chesky Is Right, and the Research Backs Him

The financial concept underneath is hedonic adaptation, the well-documented pattern where humans return to a stable baseline of happiness shortly after positive or negative financial events. Lottery winners, IPO millionaires, and 401(k) millionaires all tend to revert.

The companion concept is diminishing marginal utility of wealth. The first $50,000 of annual income buys food, shelter, and safety. The next $50,000 buys meaningful comfort. The jump from $400,000 to $450,000 buys a slightly nicer car you stop noticing in three weeks. Money keeps stacking; the emotional return per dollar shrinks toward zero.

Take a concrete case. A 60-year-old with $850,000 saved, a paid-off house, and $2,400 per month in projected Social Security at full retirement age. Using a 4% withdrawal guideline, the portfolio throws off roughly $34,000 per year, plus around $28,800 from Social Security. That is roughly $62,800 in pre-tax income, which covers the lifestyle of most retired households without touching principal.

This same saver, convinced they need to hit $1.5 million before retiring, works five more years. They add maybe $400,000 in contributions and growth. The extra withdrawal capacity at 4% is around $16,000 a year. The cost is five years of their healthiest remaining decade. Hedonic adaptation says the marginal happiness from that extra $16,000 is small. The marginal cost in time is enormous and non-refundable.

That is Chesky’s $100 billion lesson, scaled down. The number hits. The feeling does not.

Where the Lesson Cuts Both Ways

This framing fits a specific profile well: someone between 55 and 70, with at least 20 times annual expenses saved, no high-interest debt, and reliable Social Security or pension income on the way. For this reader, the danger is overshooting, not undershooting. Working an extra five years to chase a number that delivers no incremental satisfaction is the actual risk.

It hurts a different reader. A 45-year-old with $90,000 saved, a mortgage, and two kids approaching college is still in accumulation territory, where each additional dollar buys real security. Telling that household to ease off is financial malpractice. The cup is not full yet.

Lifestyle creep is the practical trap in between. Every raise absorbed into a bigger house or leased vehicle resets the baseline and pushes the “enough” number higher, permanently. That is how people earning $400,000 feel as squeezed as people earning $80,000.

What To Do This Week

  1. Calculate your “enough” number, not your dream number. Add up actual annual expenses, multiply by 25, and subtract the net present value of Social Security and any pension. That is your target portfolio. For most households it is meaningfully smaller than the round number they were chasing.
  2. Write down two non-financial goals for the same horizon as your retirement date. Chesky cited advice from President Obama: focus on what you want to do rather than who you want to be. A portfolio target with no “do” attached is the trap he fell into.
  3. Cap lifestyle creep at the next raise. Route any future raise above inflation directly into a brokerage or 401(k) before it hits checking. The baseline does not move, the “enough” number does not climb, and the math actually finishes.

Chesky built a company currently worth around $82.5 billion and learned that the milestone itself was empty. Pick a number you can actually hit, then spend the rest of your planning energy on what you intend to do once you get there.

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About the Author Joel South →

Joel South covers large-cap stocks, dividend investing, and major market trends, with a focus on earnings analysis, valuation, and turning complex data into actionable insights for investors.

He brings more than 15 years of experience as an investor and financial journalist, including 12 years at The Motley Fool, where he served as an investment analyst, Bureau Chief, and later led the Fool.com investing news desk. He has also co-hosted an investing podcast and appeared across TV and radio discussing market trends.

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