People With The Largest Car Collections In The World

People With The Largest Car Collections In The World

From celebrities to royalty to inherited collections, people love their cars. But that's especially true for those on this list, who have spent millions and billions of dollars on some of the most unique and exotic cars on the planet. These expansive collections will have even the most fervent petrolheads turning green with envy.

Craig Jackson

Craig Jackson is the CEO of Barrett-Jackson, an American car collector auction company. He's taken his leadership role to heart, accruing a massive collectionof vehicles throughout his tenure. It currently includes more than 20 cars, including a 1966 Pontiac LeMans, a Ferrari Daytona, and a classic 1965 Shelby Mustang GT.

Craig Jackson

dodge challenger1, Flickr

Dimitri Lomakov

Moscow's director of the Retro Car Museum in Russia's capital probably had to be a car fanatic to even take the job. Luckily for the museum, Dimtri Lomakov most certainly is. His collection reportedly features over 120 antique vehicles, including Adolf Hitler and Joseph Goebbels' personal Mercedes cars.

A car in the Retro Car Museum in Russia

Galin Vladimir Petrovich, CC0, Wikimedia Commons

Floyd Mayweather

He's not called "Money" Mayweather for no reason. The boxer's collection is a stunning ode to opulence and automotive tastes—mostly comprised of incredible supercars like the Bugatti Veyron, or the Veyron's successor, the Bugatti Chiron. He also has a Koenigsegg CCXR that's capable of producing speeds of 250 mph. On the 'stylish' end of the spectrum, there's a Rolls-Royce Ghost and a Mercedes SLS AMG Black—one of only 150 ever made.

Floyd Mayweather in 2011

Chamber of Fear, CC BY-SA 2.0, Wikimedia Commons

George Foreman

Inventor of the Foreman Grill—and former boxing world champion—Foreman has used his wealth from the "lean, mean, grillin' machine" to accrue more than 50cars. Apparently, his favorite is a 1977 VW Beetle as it reminds him of his humble beginnings.

George Foreman speaking in 2016

Gage Skidmore, Flickr