Mark Zuckerberg says infinite money won’t make him quit his job

Mark Zuckerberg has a sprawling estate on Kauai that cost more than $300 million to assemble. He has two mansions on the property, an underground shelter, guest houses, and enough land to raise cattle. He brews his own beer. He feeds the cows macadamia nuts to bulk them up. He is experimenting with cattle genetics in pursuit of what he described as some of the highest-quality beef in the world.

He is also, by any reasonable measure, one of the wealthiest people alive. And yet, when the interviewer from Complex pointed all of that out and asked why he keeps working, the answer was not complicated. “I don’t think I’m ever going to stop,” Zuckerberg told Complex.

What Zuckerberg told Complex about work, money and retirement

The interview aired on July 7, conducted by Complex Chief Content Officer Noah Callahan-Bever at a live event. Callahan-Bever set up the question by describing Zuckerberg as having “infinite money” and the freedom to disappear into private life whenever he chose. Zuckerberg’s answer was that the freedom does not change the impulse.

“I don’t know what I’d do,” he said. “That would be boring.”

He said he can take a break, play video games, recharge for a few days. But eventually he feels the pull to start building something again. He told the outlet that his motivation comes down to something fairly simple: “It’s just finding interesting projects to do with interesting people. It’s a good life.”

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His wife Priscilla Chan has apparently asked the same question Callahan-Bever did. Zuckerberg said she has wondered why he keeps taking on enormous projects when he could just stop. He does not have a clean answer for her either.

The Hawaii ranch is partly his version of a project that has nothing to do with Meta. He described it the same way. “It’s like I’m never going to stop,” he said. “It doesn’t matter how important the thing is.”

Why Zuckerberg says he struggles with being obsessive about work

The interview was not all bravado about loving work. Zuckerberg acknowledged that the drive to build can become a problem. “I think when you work on one thing too hard, you can burn it, right? And you can burn the people,” he said.

He said he tries to find balance by working on different kinds of projects at the same time, mixing what matters enormously with things that matter less. The ranch fits into that. His daughters help him plant trees and care for the animals. He described it as a way to stay engaged without putting everything into one pressure point.

That is a version of Zuckerberg most people do not see. The public image is the hoodie and the congressional testimony and the pivot to the metaverse. The private version, at least as he described it to Complex, is someone who genuinely does not know what he would do with free time and has stopped pretending he will ever find out.

What Zuckerberg’s work ethic means for Meta and AI investors

For investors watching Meta, comments like these carry weight beyond the personal anecdote. A founder who describes work as the only thing he would choose to do is usually someone who stays deeply plugged into what the company is building. That matters at a moment when Meta is in the middle of one of its most complicated stretches.

Zuckerberg told employees at an internal town hall on July 2 that AI agents have not progressed as quickly as he expected, according to TechCrunch. He admitted the company’s reorganization earlier this year, which included cutting roughly 10% of the global workforce in May, was not as clean as planned. His expectation is that the company sees more meaningful returns from its AI investment within the next three to six months.

Meta is spending between $125 billion and $145 billion on AI infrastructure in 2026, according to Reuters. The reorganization moved roughly 7,000 employees into AI-focused teams. The bet is enormous. Whether it pays off is still being determined, and Zuckerberg is clearly not planning to watch from the sidelines while it plays out.

Part of what is keeping him engaged is where he thinks computing is headed

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Zuckerberg’s vision for AI glasses and personal superintelligence

Part of what is keeping him engaged is where he thinks computing is headed. In the Complex interview, he described Meta’s long-term AI vision around what he called “personal superintelligence,” where AI assistants become deeply integrated into daily life through wearable devices rather than phones.

“When you interact with your phone, you’re kind of interacting with this small rectangle,” he told Complex. Glasses, in his view, keep you present in the world rather than pulling you out of it.

Meta has been developing AI-powered smart glasses through its partnership with Ray-Ban. Zuckerberg described glasses as a potential next major computing platform, the way smartphones replaced PCs for most everyday tasks. Whether that vision materializes on the timeline he expects is one of the central questions hanging over Meta’s stock right now.

What Mark Zuckerberg’s mindset means for Meta stock investors

Meta shares have recovered significantly from their 2022 lows, when Zuckerberg’s bet on the metaverse rattled investor confidence and the stock lost roughly two thirds of its value in a single year. Since then, the stock has climbed back on the strength of the advertising business and the AI narrative. The founder’s continued engagement has been part of the recovery story.

A CEO who describes himself as constitutionally unable to stop working is a different risk profile than one who is mentally checking out. For Meta, that has historically meant Zuckerberg pivots hard when he decides the direction needs to change, which he has done more than once. The AI reorganization is the latest version of that, and Reuters reported that even with the slower-than-expected pace, he is not changing course. He is pushing through.

Whether that persistence is reassuring or concerning depends on your read of where Meta’s AI bets land. What is not in question, at least based on what he told Complex, is that he will be the one making the calls either way.

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