Figma CEO Dylan Field’s astonishing rise from college dropout to billionaire is a tale of ambition, grit, and strategic brilliance. At 19, he turned down Brown University after winning a $100,000 Thiel Fellowship to start Figma,a bold choice that would transform the design world.
The early spark: math prodigy meets ambition
Born in 1992 in Penngrove, California, Dylan Field displayed an affinity for math at a young age solving algebra by age six and even bonding with a janitor “who was kind of a math savant” during middle school. While in high school, he interned at Flipboard and LinkedIn, then enrolled in Brown University to study computer science. But his path shifted quickly when he earned the prestigious Thiel Fellowship in 2012 and made the bold move to leave school behind.
Building Figma from scratch
With partner Evan Wallace, Field launched Figma in 2012 working from San Francisco to build a browser‑based, collaborative design tool. After several iterations, Figma’s public beta debuted in 2016. Its freemium model and focus on real-time multi-user collaboration planted it squarely against traditional incumbents like Adobe.
Nearly bought by Adobe
In 2022, Adobe proposed a roughly $20 billion acquisition of Figma, which would have made Field a billionaire overnight. But the deal collapsed in late 2023 due to antitrust concerns, and Adobe paid a $1 billion breakup fee. Instead of faltering, Field used the funds to offer generous severance to those who wished to leave just 4% did and refocused Figma on growth.
IPO triumph: Figma CEO hits multibillionaire status
On July 31, 2025, Figma IPO’d on the NYSE at $33 a share. That same day, its stock skyrocketed, closing at $115.50, valuing Figma at nearly $68 billion and placing Dylan Field’s stake at approximately $6.4–$6.6 billion. His personal compensation package could yield up to $1.9 billion over ten years, thanks to milestone‐based stock grants and extensive equity holdings.
Scaling vision and building culture
Under Field’s leadership, Figma doubled its revenue in 2024, hitting $749 million, and grew Q1 2025 sales by 46% year‑over‑year to $228 million. The company posted a modest profit in early 2025 after a steep stock‑based compensation hit in 2024. Known for listening closely to users, Field helped drive product innovation with AI tools and design‑to‑code features that expanded Figma’s offerings beyond its original core.
What makes the Figma CEO story extraordinary
Attribute | Why it matters |
Bold risk‑taking | Dropped out of Ivy League for a startup idea. |
Visionary product | Positioned Figma as the “Google Docs for design.” |
Culture builder | Motivated teams post‑Adobe collapse to press forward. |
Investor trust | Maintained board control and majority voting shares. |
Legacy and lessons
Dylan Field’s journey from college dropout to tech titan shows how unconventional paths can lead to massive impact. By betting on user‑centred design, embracing setbacks, and scaling thoughtfully, he redefined an industry.
If history had taken Adobe’s acquisition route, Field still might be wealthy but Figma’s IPO proved even more transformative. Now, as he holds majority voting control and prepares for long‑term bets, Field remains confident: “We have more ideas than ever,” he wrote, urging investors to trust his bold vision.
In total, the Figma CEO story underscores how a single powerful idea combined with perseverance, culture, and vision can turn a college dropout into a billionaire. Future founders would do well to study his path.