Eve Plumb Net Worth in 2026: How the Jan Brady Actress Built $6 Million

Eve Plumb net worth is estimated at $6 million as of 2026. That figure comes from decades of steady acting work, a remarkably well-timed real estate investment, and rental income not, as many assume, from Brady Bunch reruns. Those stopped paying the child cast members around 1979.

Eve Plumb Net Worth The Quick Answer

Before getting into how she got there, here's what the numbers actually look like:

Category

Detail

Estimated Net Worth (2026)

~$6 million

Reported Range

$5 million – $7 million

Biggest Single Asset

Malibu beachfront home (sold for $3.9M in 2016)

Brady Bunch Weekly Salary

~$1,100/week

Ongoing Brady Bunch Residuals

None

Current Income Sources

Acting, art sales, NYC rental income

The $6 million estimate is drawn from publicly reported real estate records and career history. Like most celebrity net worth figures, it's an informed estimate not a confirmed, audited number.

Who Is Eve Plumb?

Detail

Info

Full Name

Eve Aline Plumb

Date of Birth

April 29, 1958

Birthplace

Burbank, California

Known For

Jan Brady, The Brady Bunch (1969–1974)

Other Careers

Professional still-life painter

Spouse

Ken Pace (married 1995)

Residence

New York City and Los Angeles

She started working in television commercials at age seven, moved into guest roles on shows like Lassie, Gunsmoke, and Mannix between 1966 and 1969, and then landed the role that would follow her for the rest of her life.

Eve Plumb's Brady Bunch Salary and the Residuals Problem

The Brady Bunch made Eve Plumb a household name but the paychecks were modest, and the residuals ran out faster than most people realise.

What the Child Actors Were Paid

At the peak of The Brady Bunch, each of the six child actors including Eve Plumb earned approximately $1,100 per week. Adjust that for inflation and you get somewhere between $8,500 and $9,000 per week in today's terms, depending on which base year you use.

That's a decent income for a child actor in the early 1970s. It was not, however, anywhere near enough to fund a lifetime of financial security on its own.

What's often overlooked is just how quickly that income stopped compounding. The show ran from 1969 to 1974 five seasons. After that, the weekly paychecks disappeared.

Why the Kids See Nothing From Syndication

The Brady Bunch has been in near-constant syndication for decades. You'd think that would generate meaningful ongoing income for the cast. For the adult actors, it did.

Florence Henderson and Robert Reed negotiated contracts that included ongoing residual payments.The children's contracts were different.

Residuals were structured to cover only the first ten reruns of each episode. By around 1979, those had been exhausted. Since then nothing.

Susan Olsen, who played Cindy Brady, has confirmed this publicly on multiple occasions. As noted in Wikipedia's profile of Eve Plumb, after the show's cancellation in 1974 it went on to even greater success in syndicated reruns, yet those earnings never returned to the child cast.

So Eve Plumb's wealth wasn't built on reruns. That makes what she did next all the more interesting.

Former child actors who managed their finances well much whose net worth reflects decades of consistent media work rather than a single peak moment tend to share one quality: they kept working and kept investing.

How Eve Plumb Built Her $6 Million Net Worth

Her wealth didn't come from one big break it came from one smart property purchase, decades of steady work, and a parallel career that most people don't know about.

Real Estate: Where the Real Money Came From

This is the part of Eve Plumb's financial story that separates her from most of her Brady Bunch co-stars.

The Malibu Home

In 1969  the same year The Brady Bunch began airing a beachfront home in Malibu was purchased for $55,000.

Eve was 11 years old at the time, so the transaction was almost certainly handled by her parents or a financial guardian.

The specifics of how the purchase was arranged are not publicly documented, but the outcome is clear.She held that property for roughly 47 years.

In 2016, it sold for $3.9 million.That's a gain of nearly $3.85 million on a single property. No acting role, no gallery sale, no television appearance comes close to that figure.

Real estate specifically that one patient, long-held investment is the foundation of her net worth.

To put it in perspective, as reported by CNBC, American homebuyers today are spending more than double what buyers paid in 1965 and in premium coastal California markets, that appreciation has been even more dramatic over the same period.

Also Read: How Did Adrian Portelli Make His Money? 

New York City Properties

Also in 2016, Eve Plumb purchased a penthouse in New York City for $1.6 million, which she uses as a rental property. In June 2021, she listed a separate NYC apartment for $1.8 million.

Between the two, her New York real estate portfolio generates ongoing passive income.

Property

Purchased

Price Paid

Outcome

Malibu beachfront home

1969

$55,000

Sold 2016 for $3.9M

NYC penthouse

2016

$1.6M

Active rental property

NYC apartment

Not disclosed

Not disclosed

Listed for $1.8M in 2021

In practice, real estate has been the dominant wealth-building tool for former child actors who manage their money well.

Eve Plumb's case is a particularly clear example of that pattern one early purchase, held patiently, doing most of the heavy lifting.

Acting Income: Steady, Not Spectacular

Eve Plumb never stopped working. After The Brady Bunch ended, she deliberately moved away from the Jan Brady image most visibly with her 1976 NBC television movie Dawn: Portrait of a Teenage Runaway, where she played a teenager who becomes a sex worker. It was a sharp departure and earned her genuine critical attention.

From the late 1970s onward, she maintained a steady rhythm of guest roles and television films:

1970s–1980s: Wonder Woman, The Love Boat, Fantasy Island, Little Women (as Beth March),

Murder She Wrote

1990s–2000s: That '70s Show, All My Children, Days of Our Lives, Fudge

2010s–present: Blue Bloods, Grease: Live, The Path, Bull, Crashing, A Very Brady Renovation (HGTV, 2019)

Film work has been mostly independent I'm Gonna Git You Sucka (1988), Nowhere (1997), Blue Ruin, Bagdad, Florida. No blockbuster paydays there. Stage work in New York includes originating the lead role in Miss Abigail's Guide to Dating, Mating and Marriage (2010), Love, Loss, and What I Wore, Same Time, Next Year, and the off-Broadway Unbroken Circle (2013).

Taken together, acting has provided long-term, consistent income not a single windfall. That pattern is more common among television actors than many people realise. 

Eve Plumb as a Painter

Beyond acting, Eve Plumb is a working still-life painter whose work has been exhibited in galleries across the United States. This is not a hobby it's a parallel professional career that provides supplemental income.

That said, her specific earnings from art sales are not publicly reported. It would be inaccurate to assign a dollar figure to this income stream. What's fair to say is that it contributes to her financial picture without being its primary driver.

Net Worth by Income Source

Source

Role in Building Net Worth

Notes

Real estate (Malibu + NYC)

Primary — single largest contributor

Malibu sale alone = ~$3.9M

Acting (TV, film, stage)

Steady secondary income

No single blockbuster role

Painting and art sales

Supplemental

Exact figures not public

NYC rental income

Ongoing passive earnings

Penthouse currently rented

Brady Bunch residuals

None

Exhausted by ~1979

How Eve Plumb's Net Worth Compares to Her Brady Bunch Co-Stars

This is a gap all three competitor articles skip over entirely and it's actually useful context. Not every Brady Bunch kid ended up in the same financial position.

Cast Member

Role

Estimated Net Worth

Eve Plumb

Jan Brady

~$6 million

Maureen McCormick

Marcia Brady

~$5 million

Christopher Knight

Peter Brady

~$35 million*

Barry Williams

Greg Brady

~$600,000

Susan Olsen

Cindy Brady

~$500,000

Mike Lookinland

Bobby Brady

~$500,000

Christopher Knight's significantly higher figure reflects a successful business career in technology outside of acting not television income.

Comparing net worth across entertainment figures reveals just how much variation there is; similar divergences show up when you look at Starbucks competitors in the business world, where brand recognition alone rarely determines who ends up on top financially.

All figures are publicly reported estimates. Eve Plumb sits near the top of the child cast in terms of financial outcome, largely because of that Malibu property.

Eve Plumb's Career After The Brady Bunch

Jan Brady may have defined her public image, but the five decades of work that followed tell a more complete story.

Early Career (1966–1969)

She began with TV commercials at age seven, then moved into guest roles: The Big Valley, The Virginian, Lassie, It Takes a Thief, Mannix, Family Affair, Lancer, Gunsmoke.

These appearances were building blocks experience, visibility, a growing reputation among casting directors.

The Brady Bunch Years (1969–1974)

Jan Brady was the middle daughter sandwiched between Marcia and Cindy, perpetually overshadowed, perpetually frustrated. The character's famous line "Marcia, Marcia, Marcia!" was an expression of that frustration, not a catchphrase she celebrated.

Interestingly, the show wasn't a particularly strong ratings performer during its original run. Its cultural staying power came almost entirely through syndication.

Eve Plumb participated in several reunion projects over the years, most recently HGTV's A Very Brady Renovation in 2019, where the surviving cast members renovated the iconic Studio City home used for exterior shots in the original series.

Post-Brady Work

After the show ended, she took roles that directly challenged the Jan Brady association. Dawn: Portrait of a Teenage Runaway (1976) was the clearest signal that she wasn't interested in being typecast. The strategy worked, at least critically.

She never became a major film star, but she kept working consistently, across five decades which is genuinely rare for former child actors.

Personal Life

Eve Plumb married Ken Pace, a business and technology consultant, in 1995. They have no children. She splits her time between New York City and Los Angeles.

Earlier in life, she lived in Laguna Beach, where she served on the city's Design Review Board which reflects both her interest in architecture and her tendency to stay engaged in practical, non-entertainment pursuits.

Her lifestyle, by all accounts, is low-profile. No tabloid history, no public financial crises. That discipline is probably not unrelated to where her net worth ended up.

The same focus that keeps someone who owns Fiji Water out of financial trouble applies here strategic decisions made quietly over time tend to matter more than headline-grabbing windfalls.

Conclusion

Eve Plumb's $6 million net worth is the result of one smart early real estate investment, five decades of consistent work, and a parallel career in art not syndication checks that stopped four decades ago. Among the Brady Bunch child cast, she's one of the stronger financial outcomes.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Eve Plumb's net worth in 2026?

Estimated at approximately $6 million, with most sources citing a range between $5 million and $7 million. The figure is an estimate based on public real estate records and career history not a confirmed number.

Did Eve Plumb earn money from Brady Bunch reruns?

No. Her contract like those of the other child cast members included residuals for the first ten reruns per episode only. Those payments were exhausted by around 1979.

What was Eve Plumb's salary on The Brady Bunch?

Approximately $1,100 per week at the show's peak. In today's dollars, that's roughly $8,500–$9,000 per week depending on the inflation base year used.

What was Eve Plumb's most profitable investment?

Her Malibu beachfront home purchased for $55,000 in 1969 and sold in 2016 for $3.9 million was by far her single most valuable financial asset.

How does Eve Plumb earn money now?

Through selective acting roles, sales from her painting career, and rental income from New York City properties.

Sacha Monroe
Sacha Monroe

Sasha Monroe leads the content and brand experience strategy at KartikAhuja.com. With over a decade of experience across luxury branding, UI/UX design, and high-conversion storytelling, she helps modern brands craft emotional resonance and digital trust. Sasha’s work sits at the intersection of narrative, design, and psychology—helping clients stand out in competitive, fast-moving markets.

Her writing focuses on digital storytelling frameworks, user-driven brand strategy, and experiential design. Sasha has spoken at UX meetups, design founder panels, and mentors brand-first creators through Austin’s startup ecosystem.