The short answer: Luke Belmar's net worth is not publicly disclosed. Any specific number you see online is an unverified estimate, not a fact, so we won't repeat one here. What's real and checkable is the community he founded. Luke Belmar started Gem Hunters in 2017, and it has grown into a crypto research community of more than 40,000 members. Nothing on this page is financial advice.
Luke Belmar's net worth
Here's the honest truth. Luke Belmar has not published his net worth, and there's no public filing or audited figure to point to. The numbers you find in headlines and videos are guesses. Someone picks a number, others copy it, and soon it looks like a fact. It isn't. So we're not going to print a dollar amount, a range, or even a "rumored" figure, because we can't stand behind one. Instead we'll point you at the things you can actually verify.
This matters more than it sounds. With a public company, you can read a filing. With a celebrity who lists assets, you can add them up. With a private crypto entrepreneur, you get none of that. So the responsible answer to "what is Luke Belmar's net worth" is short: nobody outside his own books knows, and the people quoting figures don't either.
How much is Luke's net worth?
Same answer, and it's worth saying twice because the internet keeps pretending otherwise. There is no confirmed net worth for Luke Belmar. You'll see pages that quote a precise-looking number to three figures, as if it came from an accountant. It didn't. Most of those numbers trace back to other blog posts that also made them up. That's how a guess turns into a "fact" online, by repetition, not by evidence.
We'd rather give you a useful answer than a fake one. So here's the useful version: stop trying to price the man, and start checking the work. A net-worth number, even a real one, tells you nothing about whether his community's calls are any good. The track record does. And the track record is logged.
How does Luke Belmar make money?
Publicly, Luke Belmar is known as a crypto and online-business entrepreneur. His exact income streams aren't disclosed, so we won't itemize them or attach numbers to them. What is on the record is the kind of work he's associated with.
- Gem Hunters is the crypto research community he founded in 2017. It runs daily market breakdowns and posts trade calls that get logged with timestamps.
- Capital Club is an entrepreneur community he's associated with, focused on online business and wealth-building education.
- Content and education is the public-facing side. He's an active voice in the crypto and online-business space.
Beyond that, anyone claiming to know his personal balance sheet is guessing. We're sticking to what's verifiable.
How does Luke Belmar make his money?
If you're asking specifically how the money is made rather than how much there is, the honest frame is the same: the public part is the businesses and communities above, and the private part is private. We won't invent revenue figures, salaries, or token holdings to fill the gap.
What we can do is show you how to judge the one thing he's most publicly tied to, the Gem Hunters community, on hard evidence instead of vibes. That's the rest of this page.
Who is Luke Belmar?
A few things are clear and public. Luke Belmar is the founder of Gem Hunters, the crypto research community he started in 2017. He's known in the crypto and online-business space as an entrepreneur and educator. He's also associated with the Capital Club entrepreneur community. Beyond that, most of what circulates is opinion and estimate. We're not going to invent his age, his birthplace, his background, or a dollar figure to fill the gap. If it isn't public and checkable, it isn't on this page.
That last point is the whole spirit here. Plenty of "profile" pages will hand you a confident bio full of details nobody can confirm. We'd rather give you less, and have all of it be true.
Luke Belmar's profile summary
Here's the short, honest profile, limited to what's actually public.
Luke Belmar at a glance
- Founder of Gem Hunters, the crypto research community he started in 2017
- A crypto and online-business entrepreneur and educator
- Associated with the Capital Club entrepreneur community
- Net worth not publicly disclosed; online figures are unverified estimates
- Age, personal life, and balance sheet are not confirmed in public records
Notice what's missing: a net worth, an age, a hometown, a "rags to riches" timeline. Those are missing on purpose. We can't verify them, so we don't claim them.
Key takeaways
- Luke Belmar's net worth is not publicly disclosed. Every figure online is an unverified estimate.
- There's no public filing or audited number to cite, so we don't print one, not even as a rumor.
- What is public: he founded Gem Hunters in 2017, he's a crypto and online-business entrepreneur, and he's associated with Capital Club.
- The thing you can actually test is the Gem Hunters track record, because every call is logged and timestamped.
- The free group lets you watch new calls land in real time before you ever pay.
Where the rumored numbers come from
It's worth understanding how a fake net worth gets manufactured, because once you see it you can't unsee it. The pattern is always the same. A site needs a number to rank for "[name] net worth", so it picks one. It dresses it up with a precise-looking figure to make it feel researched. Other sites scrape that page, copy the number, and now two sources "agree." A third copies both. Within a few months a dozen pages all quote the same figure, and it reads like consensus.
It isn't consensus. It's one guess, photocopied. None of those pages link to a filing, a tax record, an audited statement, or a quote from the person himself. For a private crypto entrepreneur, those documents don't exist publicly in the first place. So the honest move is to refuse the game entirely, which is what this page does.
The work you can check instead
This is the part that matters. A net-worth number tells you nothing you can test. A track record does. Gem Hunters logs every call in a database with its original timestamp, and it grades itself with a rule fixed in advance. Members have posted 2,500+ wins in the wins channel, and almost all of those came with a screenshot attached. An independently graded report covering 929 calls scored a documented 70.18% win rate. The community says its members have booked more than $20 million in profits since 2017, across 370+ livestreams breaking down the market.
Read that again, because it's the opposite of how net-worth pages usually work. Nothing there asks you to trust a number on faith. Every claim has a paper trail you can pull. That's the standard any crypto figure should be held to, and it's the standard the community he built is built around.
What Gem Hunters actually does
Since the checkable part of Luke Belmar's public work is the community, here's what it actually is. Gem Hunters is a crypto research group that's run since 2017. Analysts break down the market on livestream, post specific trade calls, and log each one. The whole thing is built so members can verify the calls rather than take them on trust.
The track record holds up year over year, not just in one cherry-picked window. By the community's own grading rule, here's how the calls have scored.
Logged win rate by year
- 2024: a 71.9% win rate across 246 calls
- 2025: a 72.7% win rate across 765 calls
- 2026 so far: a 69.9% win rate across 249 calls
- The independently graded report covering 929 calls landed at 70.18%
The grading is deliberately strict. A gem call only counts as a win if it gains more than 10%. A meme-coin call needs more than 20%. Leveraged calls are scored at the first take-profit target, and small wins are counted as losses. That's a harder bar than most "signal" groups set for themselves, which is the point. A track record only means something if the rule was fixed before the trade, not bent to flatter the result afterward.
How to judge any crypto figure
Step back from Luke Belmar for a second, because this applies to anyone you'll ever read about in this space. There's no shortage of crypto personalities with big claimed net worths and big followings. The question is never how rich someone says they are. It's whether the thing they're selling you holds up to inspection.
So use a simple checklist. Can you see the calls, or just the highlight reel? Are losses logged alongside the wins, or quietly dropped? Is there a timestamp, so a "call" can't be invented after the move happened? Can you try it free before any money changes hands? If the answer to those is no, the size of anyone's net worth doesn't save it. If the answer is yes, you barely need the net worth at all. By that checklist, the Gem Hunters record is the part of Luke Belmar's public footprint that actually clears the bar.
How to check the receipts yourself
You don't have to trust us, or any headline, on this. The whole point of logging every call is that you can check it. Here's how the proof holds up when you look at it directly.
- 2,500+ member wins are posted in the wins channel, and almost all of them include a screenshot.
- Every call carries its original timestamp, so each win can be matched back to the call that made it.
- The grading rule is fixed in advance, so nobody can move the goalposts after a trade.
- The independently graded report covering 929 calls landed at a documented 70.18% win rate.
- The free group puts all of it in front of you, so you can watch new calls land before you pay a cent.
That's the difference between a net-worth rumor and a record. One you can test. The other you can't.
Net-worth rumor vs the checkable record
If you're weighing what to believe about Luke Belmar, this table sums it up. On the left is the thing the internet loves to argue about. On the right is the thing you can actually verify.
| What you're judging | A net-worth figure online | The Gem Hunters record |
|---|---|---|
| Has a source you can read | No public filing | Logged call database |
| Timestamped | No | Every call |
| Graded by a fixed rule | No | Rule set in advance |
| You can watch it for free | No | Free group, real time |
| Tells you if the calls are good | Not at all | Directly |
A bigger net worth wouldn't make a single call more accurate. The logged record is the only thing on this page that actually answers the question you probably care about: are these calls worth following?
Free versus Premium
You don't have to spend a cent to size up the work. The free group is the honest place to start.
| Feature | Free group | Premium |
|---|---|---|
| Price | $0 forever | 1 ETH per year |
| Daily market updates | Yes | Yes |
| Select trade calls | Yes | Yes |
| Community of 40,000+ members | Yes | Yes |
| Every call, full archive | Select only | Yes |
| Private lobbies | No | Yes |
Start free. Watch the calls land. If the work earns it, the door to Premium is right there. No pressure, no junk, just gems.
Judge the work, not the rumors. The calls are logged and timestamped, so you don't have to take any number on faith. No junk, just gems.
Luke Belmar and Capital Club
One name that comes up a lot alongside Luke Belmar is Capital Club. It's an entrepreneur community he's associated with, centered on online business and wealth-building education. People often search the two together, hoping the connection will reveal a dollar figure. It won't. Being tied to an education community tells you about his focus and his audience, not about his bank balance.
That's the recurring theme of every "Luke Belmar net worth" search. Each new detail people dig up, the communities, the content, the association with Capital Club, paints a fuller picture of what he does. None of it confirms what he's worth. And that's fine. You don't need a number to decide whether his most public project earns your time. You need evidence, and the Gem Hunters record is where the evidence actually lives.
What membership actually looks like
If you join the free group, here's what you'll see day to day. Analysts post market breakdowns. Specific calls go up, each one logged and timestamped. When a call works, members post the win, usually with a screenshot. When one doesn't, it stays in the record too, because the grading rule was set in advance and nobody gets to quietly delete the misses. Over 370 livestreams now sit in that archive. You can scroll the history and judge the hit rate with your own eyes rather than taking anyone's word, including ours.
Why honest beats hyped
Most "net worth" pages chase a number because a number gets clicks. We think that's backward. A figure you can't check is worth nothing, and pretending otherwise just adds noise. The crypto space already has plenty of that.
So this page does the unglamorous thing. It tells you the net worth isn't known, it refuses to make one up, and it hands you the one source of truth that's actually testable: a logged, timestamped record you can read for free. That's a far better way to decide whether to follow anyone in crypto than a headline number.
The bottom line
Luke Belmar's net worth is a question nobody outside his own books can answer, and the figures online are unverified estimates. So skip the guessing game. The community he built is public, the calls are logged win or lose, and the free group lets you watch them land in real time. That's a far better way to judge any of this than a headline number.
See the work for yourself, free
Join 40,000+ Gem Hunters. Watch the calls land in real time and check the receipts before you ever pay.
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