Inside 23-year-old millionaire's incredible car collection worth $87 million
Published on Sep 07, 2025 at 11:18 AM (UTC+4)
by Molly Davidson
Last updated on Sep 03, 2025 at 2:57 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by
Emma Matthews
Zach is only 23, but his car collection is already worth a staggering $87 million.
He owns around 75 machines spread across multiple garages, each one dripping with history, horsepower, or Hollywood stardust.
Most people his age are still chasing their first car loan, while Zach is deciding between hypercars and vintage legends for his daily commute.
For him, every garage door opens onto another slice of automotive history, from 1903 antiques to cutting-edge hypercars.
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What an $87 million car collection looks like
The centerpiece of Zach’s $87 million car collection is a Koenigsegg Regera.
Packing 1,500hp, that one alone carries a price tag of around $4 million.
Its party trick is a $20,000 ‘ghost key’ that unlocks the car Transformers-style, with panels and doors moving in sync before the engine growls to life.
Next to it sits one of the most iconic duos in car history: a 1955 Mercedes 300 SL Gullwing with barely any mileage and the modern SLS AMG that revived those famous upward-swinging doors.
Lamborghini gets an entire timeline of its own, starting with the 400 GT, moving through the Miura that defined the term ‘supercar,’ onto the Countach 25th Anniversary model with bolt-on arches and a massive rear wing.
Finishing with the Aventador.


Ferrari has a corner too, led by the razor-sharp 488 Pista and the elegant 365 GTC, which Zach calls one of the greatest grand tourers ever built.
And race pedigree runs deep in this collection.
Two Williams Formula 1 cars – an ’89 Thierry Boutsen chassis and a 2004 Webber/Heidfeld V10 – share space with a Chevron B15 that appeared in the opening scene of Rush.
Zach has even supplied cars for Fast & Furious 9, including the one that John Cena called his favorite.

American muscle meets British icons
The American classics are equally bold.
A split-window 1963 Corvette, restored but still faithful to its original design, stands beside a Shelby 427SC Cobra 50th Anniversary car.
British icons show up too, from a barn-find Mini Cooper 1275 with chassis number three, to a Lotus Cortina mid-rebuild, a Caterham 620R, and even a Renault Twizy mocked up as an F1 car.



There’s also a 1929 Sunbeam with a squeeze horn that feels like something straight out of a period film.
When you add it all up, from barn finds to hypercars, the collection really does look and feel every bit of its $87 million valuation.
The next generation of collectors
At 23, Zach’s building a car collection on the scale normally reserved for billionaires decades older.
Most private museums belong to tycoons in Florida or Germany, with rows of hundreds of cars locked away behind velvet ropes.
Zach is part of a new wave that grew up with YouTube supercar culture and decided to skip straight to owning the dream.

His garages show what Gen Z collecting looks like: hypercars parked next to movie props, million-dollar Ferraris sharing space with Minis pulled from barns.
It’s less about keeping the doors shut and more about showing and entertaining the world.
That shift matters.
For older collectors, value came from secrecy and exclusivity.
For younger names like Zach, value comes from storytelling, and from building something that can be shared.
See the collection in full below:
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Molly Davidson is a Junior Content Writer at Supercar Blondie. Based in Melbourne, she holds a double Bachelor’s degree in Arts/Law from Swinburne University and a Master’s of Writing and Publishing from RMIT. Molly has contributed to a range of magazines and journals, developing a strong interest in lifestyle and car news content. When she’s not writing, she’s spending quality time with her rescue English staffy, Boof.