Seann William Scott, the comedic actor best known for playing Steve Stifler in the “American Pie” franchise, has an estimated net worth of $25 million.
A legal filing submitted in August 2025 as part of divorce proceedings laid out Scott’s financial picture in extraordinary detail, drawing widespread attention.
The filing revealed that Scott averages around $110,000 per month in income, including $45,000 in royalty payments and $31,000 in dividend and interest earnings.
His disclosed assets include $12,285,322 in stocks and $18,781,328 in real estate, along with $85,000 in cars, $171,000 in furniture, and $93,000 in art.
Scott’s total disclosed assets amount to approximately $31.6 million, a figure that underscores just how financially successful his entertainment career has been.
His monthly expenses run around $60,000, which includes $8,000 for childcare and $15,000 for property taxes, while legal fees in the divorce have already reached $500,000.
Scott’s breakout came in 1999 when he was cast as Steve Stifler in “American Pie,” a role that made him one of the most recognizable comedic actors of his generation despite earning just $8,000 for that first film.
By the time “American Reunion” arrived in 2012, his market value had risen dramatically, with Scott negotiating a $5 million salary plus a share of the profits.
The franchise he helped define generated nearly $1 billion at the global box office across its theatrical run, cementing his status as a bankable Hollywood name.
Scott also built a substantial real estate portfolio, purchasing a 1.5-acre property in Malibu’s Point Dume area in 2004 for just under $4 million, which he listed in early 2026 for $17.85 million.
He also bought a 5,100-square-foot lot in Venice, Los Angeles in 2017 for $2.2 million, later developing it into a two-home compound listed for just under $5 million in early 2024.
Beyond “American Pie,” Scott starred in “Dude, Where’s My Car?” alongside Ashton Kutcher, which grossed roughly $73 million worldwide, as well as “Old School,” “Road Trip,” and “Role Models,” which earned over $92 million globally.
He expanded into voice acting in 2006 as Crash the possum in “Ice Age: The Meltdown,” continuing the role across multiple sequels in one of animation’s most profitable franchises.
On television, Scott joined Fox’s “Lethal Weapon” in its third season and more recently joined the ABC sitcom “Shifting Gears,” starring alongside Tim Allen and Kat Dennings.
Scott married interior designer Olivia Korenberg in 2019, and they have a daughter named Frankie Rose Scott, before he filed for divorce in February 2024 amid the legal proceedings that brought his $25 million net worth into public view.
