Meet the 10 richest billionaires with Arizona connections
Arizona has many people on Forbes’ billionaires list in 2025. These 10 are rolling in the most dough.
Arizona has many people on Forbes’ billionaires list in 2025. These 10 are rolling in the most dough.
If you want to buy a home in Arizona in the next decade, you better start saving now.
The Seargeant-Oldaker home was built in 1909 and recently saved from demolition. It’s being moved just a smidge.
Over the last 10 years, the number of millionaires in this Valley city has grown by 125%, behind only a city in China.
Donald Trump’s schizophrenic tariffs have hit some Arizona billionaires in the wallet, while others have gotten richer.
Phoenix is getting its first direct route to Asia, largely thanks to bringing a Taiwanese semiconductor manufacturer to town.
Arizona has one county with a huge population center and 14 others with much smaller populations. Do income levels correlate?
Rent in Arizona has jumped the most in the country, according to one study. In these locales, a mortgage payment is cheaper.
Donald Trump’s tariffs on Canadian imports are set to go into effect on April 2. Canada wants to remind you what that means.
Wages have not kept up with inflation in Phoenix, particularly when it comes to housing costs.
Arizona’s attempted senator, now an advisor in the Trump administration, signed off on 1,000 media firings over the weekend.
The average home in Arizona sells for roughly $440,000. You can easily beat that price – if you’re open to small-town life.
Two Valley cities have some of the country’s highest income thresholds for being considered middle-class.
Phoenix’s suburbs attract a lot of movers, but only one ranks among the most in-demand locales in the country.
Rent has gone way up in Phoenix over the years, and it costs the most in these areas.
Puppyland has run into trouble elsewhere for pushing expensive payment plans on people for dogs that need pricey vet visits.
Attention snowbird retirees: Direct your migration to these locales.
Phoenix used to be one of America’s inflation hotspots, with skyrocketing prices. Now, the pendulum has swung the other way.
If you want to retire in Arizona, you can do so in these places without breaking the bank.
You don’t have to be a millionaire to be among our state’s financial elite. But you do have to make a lot.
Scottsdale has the most expensive gas in the Valley at an average of $3.449 per gallon, according to AAA.
SSP America employees at the Phoenix airport joined two other groups protesting unsafe working conditions and low wages.