Chuck Feeney, co-founder of Duty Free Shoppers, was a billionaire who chose extreme simplicity and quiet generosity. Despite immense wealth in the 1980s, he lived modestly—wearing a cheap watch, flying economy, and avoiding luxury—while secretly transferring his entire fortune to a foundation, Atlantic Philanthropies.

Over nearly four decades, he gave away about $8 billion, mostly anonymously, funding education, healthcare, scientific research, and peace efforts around the world.

His philosophy, “giving while living,” influenced modern philanthropy and inspired figures like Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, contributing to the creation of the Giving Pledge.

Feeney rejected recognition and privilege, believing wealth was a responsibility, not a status symbol.

In 2020, his foundation spent its last dollar and closed, having fulfilled its mission. He kept only a modest sum for retirement, died in 2023 at age 92, and left no buildings bearing his name—only millions of lives improved.

His legacy shows that true wealth lies not in what one accumulates, but in what one gives away.

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