- New wealth list reveals the world's richest billionaires under the age of 35
- Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg, 31, tops the list with a staggering $41.6bn
- The creators of tech companies such as Airbnb and Snapchat also feature
- Others made the list after inheriting wealth through parents' companies
Among those to feature in the world's top 20 billionaires under the age of 35 are the brilliant young entrepreneurs responsible for start ups such as Snapchat, Airbnb and Facebook.
However, many others have inherited old money - companies, fortunes and vast real estate empires passed down from their parents, and in some cases, their grandparents.
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg (pictured) is worth a staggering $41.bn at the age of 31
Dwarfing the fortunes of all others on the list is Zuckerberg, 31, who founded Facebook in 2004, and is now worth an estimated $41.6bn.
His nearest competitor on the list is his 31-year-old co-founder Dustin Moskovitz, who, like Zuckerberg, is self made, but has only earned a comparatively paltry $9.3bn.
The figures, compiled by Wealthx.com, offer remarkable insight into those who earned their fortunes through their own enterprise, while others inherited the reins of massive multinationals.
Only six women feature on the list - one of which is Tatiana Casiraghi. An American-born socialite who is married to the fourth in the line of succession to the throne of Monaco.
Worth an estimated $2.2bn, the 31-year-old is the recipient of a South American family conglomerate that once controlled more than 100 countries.
Real estate mogul Yang Huiyan - who placed third on the list - is one of the richest women in Asia and has an estimated $6.3bn fortune.
Although the 33-year-old's riches were made after she reportedly received 70 per cent of the shares of her father's firm Country Garden in 2007 - she works on the company board and is considered a powerful businesswoman in her own right.
In sixth place sits Elizabeth Homes - an American entrepreneur who founded blood-test company Theranos when she was 19.
Worth a massive $4.5bn, the 31-year-old revolutionised the industry by standardizing blood test processes.
Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin, 33, whose court battle and personal falling out with Zuckerberg was documented in the Hollywood film The Social Network, is worth $5.3bn following the completion of his out of court settlement.
The list reveals the continually growing influence of the new wave of tech founders - several hugely successful technology companies feature prominently alongside more traditional heads of industry.
Nathan Blecharczyk, Brian Chesky and Joe Gebbia, all from accommodation provider Airbnb, each boast a fortune of $3bn.
Further behind them are the hugely wealthy young creators of Snapchat. Evan Spiegel, who is also the youngest on the list at 25, is worth $1.9billion, and his co-founder Bobby Murphy, 26, is worth the same.
They sit slightly above Norwegian siblings Carl Erik Hagen, Caroline Hagen Kjos and Nina Camilla Hagen Sorli - all of whom are the beneficiaries of family company Canica and worth $1.5bn each.
Run by their father Stein Erik Hagen, Canica holds large stakes in several companies, including investment conglomerate Orkla, of which Hagen is also chairman.




