The staggering amount of money snowboarder Chloe Kim made by 15 to allow parents to retire revealed


The two-time Olympic gold medalist's father quit his job when she was seven years old to help her pursue snowboarding


Chloe Kim at the Ferragamo fashion show as part of Milan Fashion Week Fall 2026 held at Triennale Milano on February 28, 2026 in Milan, Italy© Getty Images
Beatriz Colon
Beatriz ColonNew York Writer - New York
March 24, 2026
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It's not just Chloe Kim reaping the benefits of her snowboarding career.

The two-time Olympic gold medalist, 25, was only four years old when she began snowboarding, and spent her third and fourth grade years training in Geneva, Switzerland, before returning to California and training at Mammoth Mountain.

By the time she was seven years old, her dad Jong Jin Kim quit his job so he could support her budding snowboarding career, and by the time she was 15 years old, she was able to retire both her parents.

Chloe Kim attends the 2026 Vanity Fair Oscar Party hosted by Mark Guiducci at Los Angeles County Museum of Art on March 15, 2026 in Los Angeles, California.© Getty Images
Chloe at the 2026 Vanity Fair Oscar Party

Chloe, speaking on the Not Skinny But Not Fat podcast, first recalled moving out of her parents home when she was 18 years old. "Not because — like I love my parents to death — I just liked my own space. And they are so busy all the time, it stressed me out."

"Also my parents don't work, I was able to retire both of them by the time I was 15," she said. Chloe's father previously worked in both engineering and real estate, and her mother, Boran Yun Kim, worked for Korean Airlines in LAX.

Her dad quit his job when she was seven years old, which host Amanda Hirsch called a "risk," however Chloe maintained: "But it was going to pay off, you best believe."

Jong Jin Kim, Father of Chloe Kim of Team United States, holds a sign in support of his daughter as he watches the Women’s Snowboard Halfpipe Final on day six of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Livigno Snow Park on February 12, 2026 in Livigno, Italy© Getty Images
The snowboarder's father cheering her on at the 2026 Winter Olympics

"It was really dumb, like in hindsight, it was the dumbest thing you could do, but he did it and it worked out, thank god," she continued.

Noting that though she "didn't know" what quitting one's job really meant when she was seven years old, she said: "I feel like my dad was telling me that he would support me, and I was like, 'Cool.'"

Chloe also emphasized that she did not grow up with money, and moreover she "didn't know that there was money in snowboarding, there really wasn't and there isn't really," adding that the only person she knew managed to amass significant wealth from the sport was Shawn White, who was also a skateboarder. 

She shared how grateful she was for her family© Instagram
Chloe's parents are from South Korea, and raised their daughter in Torrance, California

"For me as a woman, as an Asian-American … I didn't see that, [I thought] 'I'm never going to get the same opportunity as anyone,'" she said. "So when I started doing really well, and making money, I was like damn."

Silver medalist Chloe Kim of Team United States celebrates with boy friend Myles Garrett after the Women’s Snowboard Halfpipe on day six of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Livigno Snow Park on February 12, 2026 in Livigno, Italy© Getty Images
Chloe is in a relationship with Cleveland Browns player Myles Garrett

Chloe also noted that much of the money came from sponsorships, and recalled her first big partnership being with Monster Energy. "I'm still with them, and that contract changed my life, it was six figures."

"I retired my parents when I became a millionaire," Chloe confirmed, maintaining: "It's such an honor and a privilege to do that for my parents, they took such a big risk for me, and so to be able to get my mom out of a really [expletive] work environment was awesome."

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