ROBBIE Williams is raking it in after releasing his Netflix documentary and selling off his huge property empire.
The pop star once owned mansions all over the world worth a total of £44million.
After selling his homes in Los Angeles, Switzerland and Wiltshire, he now lives a quiet life in London.
Robbie turned fifty this month, yet he is still pulling in the crowds.
Updated financial statements in at Companies House reveal how much his firm You’re Not Famous took in last year, with the former Take That singer making £22,000 a day from his empire.
The live music firm which he set-up in 2009, has now revealed a whopping £102 million in profits.
Earlier accounts also revealed how much of a money-spinner the firm has been for him.
Williams bagged £61.1 million in turnover in 2018, his best year there so far.
In 2018, Robbie and wife Ayda Field signed a deal said to be worth £10 million to judge The X Factor.
Despite his wealth Robbie revealed in 2020 that he is only now “giving myself the permission to be that person that has been this successful.”
His wife Ayda joked he was a penny pincher and said Robbie – who grew up in Stoke-on-Trent – makes her blow out candles when she walks out of a room.
“I lit a candle then I just went into the bathroom to pee.
By the time I’d come back he’d blown out the candle and went, ‘You’re just burning money. You’re not even in the room!’,” she shared.
“I’d say that’s the difference between Beverly Hills and Stoke-on-Trent.”
Robbie also revealed he is not keen on bringing his three children up in LA, admitting he “didn’t even know the word ‘entitlement’ until I got here.”
The dad of four said: “We don’t want to live in California all the time.
“It’s just not the best place in the world to be raising teenagers and we’re going to have four teenagers eventually. Life is too fast there. I grew up too fast.
“There are too many ways to grow up even quicker. We want to avoid that.”
He continued: “I don’t want to be in England all year round either. I’m just too famous there. I wish I could be as safe in my bubble as my kids are in theirs.
”There are these kids with a sense of entitlement because of the place they were born and the parents they have and having the money that they have.”