Nancy Mace Net Worth 2026: Quiver Quantitative Estimates $3.4 Million
March 3, 2026 — Washington, D.C. Quiver Quantitative estimates the Nancy Mace net worth 2026 at $3.4 million as of February 27, placing her 205th in net worth among U.S. Congress members. The figure derives from public financial disclosures with no tracked publicly traded assets.
Latest Tracking Data
Quiver Quantitative’s assessments, published in recent press releases, consistently report the Nancy Mace net worth 2026 between $3.4 million on February 25-27. The platform notes Rep. Mace (R-SC) holds approximately $0 in live-tracked public assets, indicating wealth likely in private holdings or real estate. A Fox News article from May 2025 corroborated the $3.4 million estimate amid congressional stock trading discussions, confirming no reported trades by Mace.
Financial Disclosure Details
A Finbold analysis, updated December 23, 2025, based on Mace’s 2023 financial disclosure (filed August 13, 2024, covering 2023), estimates a broader Nancy Mace net worth 2026 range of -$4.78 million to +$4.09 million. Assets totaled $1.22 million to $5.59 million, led by PJME LLC valued at $1 million to $5 million in Isle of Palms, South Carolina. Other assets included credit union accounts ($50,001-$100,000), IRAs ($1,001-$100,000 each), and smaller holdings like 529 plans and bank savings.
Liabilities ranged from $1.5 million to $6 million, primarily property mortgages from North Point Bank ($500,001-$1 million) and Beacons Bank ($1 million-$5 million).
Income sources comprised her congressional salary of $193,400, rent from PJME LLC ($100,001-$1 million), and minor dividends from annuities and IRAs. Prior public relations consulting and book sales from In the Company of Men also contribute, per Finbold.
Additional Trackers and Context
OpenSecrets.org provides older 2018 data, while LegiStorm references her 2025 annual disclosure filed August 13, 2025 (covering 2024), though full details require subscription. The Nancy Mace net worth 2026 aligns with prior figures, showing stability since entering Congress in 2021, per unverified X posts.
A House Ethics Committee probe announced March 2, 2026, concerns a $3,165 lodging over-reimbursement from 2023-2024, unrelated to overall wealth. Next disclosures are due around May 2026.