What Is Rachel Bloom's Net Worth?
Rachel Bloom is an American actress, comedian, writer, and producer who has a net worth of $3 million. Rachel Bloom is best known for starring in, co-creating, writing, and producing The CW musical series "Crazy Ex-Girlfriend," which aired from 2015 to 2019 and earned Bloom a Golden Globe for Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series – Comedy or Musical and a Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics. Rachel graduated from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts and performed at Upright Citizens Brigade Theater. She has more than 80 acting credits to her name, including the films "Most Likely to Murder" (2018), "The School for Good and Evil" (2022), and "Your Place or Mine" (2023) and the television series "Very Mallory" (2013), "iZombie" (2018), "Into the Dark" (2022), "Reboot" (2022), and "Frasier" (2024).
Rachel has lent her voice to many animated projects, such as "The Angry Birds Movie 2" (2019), "Trolls World Tour" (2020), "Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers" (2022), "BoJack Horseman" (2014–2016), and "The Simpsons" (2017–2025). Bloom also wrote for the Adult Swim series "Robot Chicken" from 2012 to 2014, and she wrote, produced, and starred in the 2024 Netflix special "Rachel Bloom: Death, Let Me Do My Special," which was adapted from her off-Broadway one-woman show of the same name. In 2020, she published the book "I Want to Be Where the Normal People Are."
Early Life
Rachel Bloom was born Rachel Leah Bloom on April 3, 1987, in Los Angeles County, California. She is the daughter of healthcare lawyer Alan Bloom and musician Shelli Bloom, and she grew up in a Jewish household in Manhattan Beach. Rachel was involved with the drama program at Mira Costa High School, then she earned a BFA in Drama from the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University. There, Bloom was a director and head writer for the sketch comedy troupe Hammerkatz, which performed at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre. During her college years, she was a writer's intern at the NBC sketch comedy series "Saturday Night Live." After college, Rachel was roommates with future "Broad City" star/co-creator Ilana Glazer.
Career
Bloom recorded a video for her song "Fuck Me, Ray Bradbury" in 2010 and released it shortly before Bradbury's 90th birthday. The video garnered over 600,000 views within its first week of release and earned a Hugo Award nomination for Best Dramatic Presentation. In 2011, Rachel was a staff writer on the animated Fox series "Allen Gregory," and in 2012, she guest-starred on "How I Met Your Mother" and began writing for the Adult Swim series "Robot Chicken." In 2013, she released the musical comedy album "Please Love Me" and collaborated with Jack Dolgen and her husband, Dan Gregor, on "Suck It, Christmas (A Chanukah Album)." From 2015 to 2019, Bloom starred as Rebecca Bunch on The CW musical series "Crazy-Ex Girlfriend," which she co-created with Aline Brosh McKenna. Rachel also executive produced and wrote for the show, which aired 62 episodes over four seasons and won four Primetime Emmys out of eight nominations.
In 2018, Bloom co-starred with Adam Pally and Vincent Kartheiser in the film "Most Likely to Murder," and she guest-starred on "Portlandia" and "iZombie." She voiced Silver in "The Angry Birds Movie 2" (2019) and Barb in "Trolls World Tour" (2020), then she had a recurring role on the Hulu series "Reboot" in 2022. That year Rachel also appeared in the films "Bar Fight!" and "The School for Good and Evil," and she toured the country with her standup/musical comedy show "Death, Let Me Do My Show," which later ran at the off-Broadway venues the Lucille Lortel Theatre and the Orpheum Theatre and was adapted into a 2024 Netflix special. In 2023, Bloom appeared in the film "Your Place or Mine" alongside Reese Witherspoon, Ashton Kutcher, Jesse Williams, and Zoë Chao.

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Personal Life
Rachel married Dan Gregor on January 25, 2015, after six years of dating. Gregor is a writer, director, producer, and actor, and he wrote three episodes of "Crazy Ex-Girlfriend" and co-wrote and directed Bloom's film "Most Likely to Murder." The couple welcomed a daughter in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. Rachel has spoken openly about struggling with depression, OCD, and anxiety throughout her life. In a 2016 essay she wrote for Glamour, Bloom stated, "The thing that has most aided me through my anxiety and depression is realizing I'm not alone. I'm naturally bubbly, even when I'm sad. But here's what people can't see: During a spiral the world feels dark. I have anxiety about anxiety, then I worry the anxiety will ruin my life. It's a snake-eats-tail loop. But in opening up to others, I found a lot of people have felt the same way."
In 2016, the East West Players honored Bloom with its Visionary Award, which is given to "individuals who have raised the visibility of the Asian Pacific American (APA) community through their craft." "Crazy Ex-Girlfriend" was praised for showing an Asian-American male in a lead role that subverted stereotypes. That year Rachel also received Planned Parenthood's Excellence in Entertainment award, and in 2019, the Human Rights Campaign named her an Ally for Equality.
Real Estate
In 2015, Rachel and Daniel paid $1.3 million for a home in Los Angeles. In 2019, they filed a lawsuit against Southern California real estate developer, alleging they were deceived into purchasing a home with major structural defects. As first-time home buyers, they bought the recently-renovated home on representations that it had been fully remodeled. However, they later discovered numerous concealed issues, including sloping floors, leaking windows, cracked walls, and doors that wouldn't close. According to their complaint, a load-bearing wall had been improperly removed and replaced, and the supposed earthquake retrofitting was largely cosmetic. They alleged the home had been flipped through a fraudulent scheme involving Menjivar and his associates, former USC football players Matt Leinart and Brandon Hance, who were affiliated with the renovation firms RUN Group and Avenue Homes. The couple estimated their repair costs at over $500,000 and sued for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and violation of real estate disclosure laws. Their mediation efforts were unsuccessful, prompting them to seek both compensatory and punitive damages in court.
Awards and Nominations
Bloom has received six Primetime Emmy nominations, winning for Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics for the song "Anti-Depressants Are So Not a Big Deal" from "Crazy Ex-Girlfriend" (shared with Adam Schlesinger and Jack Dolgen) in 2019. The show also earned her Emmy nominations for Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics for "Settle for Me" (2015) and "We Tapped That Ass" (2017) and Outstanding Original Main Title Theme Music (2016 and 2019), and she received a nomination for Outstanding Short-Format Animated Program for "Robot Chicken" (2015). Rachel won a Golden Globe for Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Series – Comedy or Musical for "Crazy Ex-Girlfriend" in 2016, and she was nominated in the same category in 2017. In 2016, "Crazy Ex-Girlfriend" earned Bloom a Gotham Award for Breakthrough Series – Long Form, a Television Critics Association Award for Individual Achievement in Comedy, and a Critics Choice Television Award and an International Online Cinema Award for Best Actress in a Comedy Series. In 2013, Rachel earned a Web Award for Best YouTube Song for "You Can Touch My Boobies," and in 2024, she received an Astra Television Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress in a Streaming Comedy Series for "Reboot." For "Death, Let Me Do My Show," she earned a Drama Desk Award nomination for Outstanding Lyrics (2024) and a Critics' Choice Award nomination for Best Comedy Special (2025).