Armie Hammer reveals how much of his wealthy father's $180M fortune he received after his death in 2022

3 hours ago 8

By ADAM S. LEVY, US SENIOR SHOWBUSINESS REPORTER

Published: 00:03 BST, 17 June 2026 | Updated: 01:35 BST, 17 June 2026

Armie Hammer says that he hasn't inherited a significant chunk of his family's wealth that would allow him to stop working.

The 39-year-old actor, speaking with The Hollywood Reporter Tuesday, said that he did not get life-changing money in the wake of his father Michael Armand Hammer's November 2022 death at 67 following a cancer battle.

'It's just one of those things that's so complicated, you have to be a tax attorney to fully understand it,' the Los Angeles native, who is the great-grandson of late business magnate Armand Hammer, told the outlet. 

The actor's great-grandfather Armand Hammer reportedly left behind $800 million  following his December 1990 passing, from which Armie's father inherited $180 million, according to multiple reports.

The Call Me By Your Name actor said that 'the end result' financially following his father's passing 'was not I'm set for the rest of my life, or even for the next couple of years ... it hasn't been that.'

Hammer, who has also been seen in films such as The Man from U.N.C.L.E. and The Lone Ranger, fell into controversy in early 2021 after several women accused him of sex abuse and an obsession with cannibalism.

Armie Hammer, 39, says that he hasn't inherited a significant chunk of his family's wealth that would allow him to stop working. Pictured in LA in 2025 

He was subsequently dropped from his agency WME and lost a number of roles he had on tap, including the Jennifer Lopez film Shotgun Wedding and the Paramount Plus series The Offer.

Hammer told the outlet that he cared for his ailing father in his final years in the Cayman Islands, where the family owned property.

'I would bathe him and cook food for him and feed him and change his diapers and do all that stuff,' the actor said.

Hammer said he and his late father worked through yearslong tensions in his final days. 

'We got to have all those conversations,' Hammer said. 'We got to have an amends with each other. We got to really move through it.

'And then I got to be there holding his hand when he died. Which is like a gift.'

Hammer spoke with the outlet amid an attempted Hollywood comeback, as it was reported that he's been renting a Los Angeles area home after residing for years in the Cayman Islands in the wake of his scandals.

The Social Network actor said that there has been a period of readjustment amid his relocation.

Hammer seen at the 2020 E! People's Choice Awards at the Barker Hangar in Santa Monica, California, months before allegations interrupted his career 

The Call Me By Your Name actor pictured at a March 23 Clippers game in LA 

'I was back in a city that felt like it used to be my city, but it had moved on without me,' Hammer told the outlet. 'I made these problems for myself.

Hammer reflected on the consequences of his past actions, which left him unemployable in show business for a five-year stretch.  

'This didn't happen to me by a fluke accident,' he said. 'I didn't do what people are saying I did. But I brought very dangerous and unsafe people into my life, and I pissed off people in my life - and here we are.'

Hammer told THR he gained a measure of clarity in the days following his father's passing as he had a discussion with 'an old Jamaican guy' bemoaning how friends in show business would text him with supportive messages, but not take up for him publicly.

The man laid forth an analogy to Hammer, asking if he would want his friends to get burned if his house was on fire.

'I would want them to stay as far away from the fire as possible,' Hammer concluded, to which the man told him, 'Now you're thinking like a real friend,' before wandering off.

He said of the impactful exchange: 'I think that was a spiritual moment - Joseph Campbell would have called it a mentor moment in my hero's journey, whatever the f*** that is.'

Read Entire Article