Lynsi Snyder


Lynsi Lavelle Snyder-Ellingson is an American billionaire businesswoman, the owner and heiress of the In-N-Out Burger company. She is the only child of Lynda and H. Guy Snyder and the only grandchild of Harry and Esther Snyder, who founded In-N-Out in 1948.
According to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, in 2012, Snyder was the youngest American female billionaire. As the sole beneficiary of family trusts, she received control of the company's stock in its entirety on her 35th birthday, becoming the sole owner. In 2025, Snyder ranked No. 153 on the annual Forbes 400 list of the wealthiest Americans, with a net worth of $8.7 billion.

Early life and education

Snyder was born in San Dimas, California, to Lynda Lou and Harry Guy Snyder, and spent her early childhood years at her parents' home in Glendora, California. She is of Dutch descent on her father's side. She has two older half-sisters through her mother. Traci is married to former In-N-Out president and COO Mark Taylor.
By the late 1980s, Snyder and her parents had moved to the small town of Shingletown, California, where they lived on a ranch. While Snyder's uncle Rich Snyder successfully ran and expanded In-N-Out's business operations, Snyder's father struggled personally. Throughout her childhood, he was often in rehab centers and hospitals due to his ongoing drug addiction. When Snyder was 12, her parents separated due to her father's extramarital affair; their divorce was finalized in January 1997.
In 1993, Snyder's uncle Rich flew to Northern California to see her in a school play; the following day, he attended the opening of In-N-Out store No. 93 in Fresno, California. On his return home, he died in a plane crash. In 1999, Snyder's father died of congestive heart failure as a result of his excessive prescription drug use.
Snyder graduated from Shingletown Christian Academy, a private high school that her parents helped found, before relocating to Southern California with her first husband.
In the early 2000s, Snyder took auto mechanics, engine performance, and diagnostics classes at Citrus College, her local community college, where she was one of the few women who received high grades.

Career

As a teenager, Snyder's first job was working as a receptionist in a dental office owned by a friend of her father. At age 17, she was hired at a new In-N-Out store in Redding, California, where she leafed lettuce, peeled potatoes, and sliced onions. Only the store managers knew of Snyder's true identity; the other workers were initially unaware of her family ties to the company, due to Snyder's desire to be treated "normally." In the 2000s, Snyder first took a job in In-N-Out’s corporate merchandising department and subsequently rotated through other departments as she learned the business.
During 2006, Snyder and In-N-Out were embroiled in a bitter lawsuit with Rich Boyd, a former company executive. Boyd was fired for allegedly misusing company funds, but he claimed that Snyder, and then-vice president Mark Taylor, were trying to oust the elderly Esther Snyder from the company. Both Lynsi Snyder and Mark Taylor denied the claims, with Snyder saying the lawsuit “contains outright lies and awful inaccuracies to try to cover his own errors. By far, the most upsetting is his fabrication about the relationship between me and my gramma.” The lawsuit was settled out of court in May 2006, less than three months before Esther's death.
On January 1, 2010, Snyder became the sixth president of In-N-Out, succeeding her brother-in-law, Mark Taylor, who was promoted to become the company's chief operating officer. She occupies the same leadership position that her grandfather Harry, uncle Rich, father Guy, and grandmother Esther previously held. Before Snyder became president of In-N-Out Burger, a taped message from her was broadcast to all company associates letting them know about the transition and the future of the company. Esther's signature was finally replaced with Lynsi's on associates' paychecks in 2009, three years after Esther's death.
Snyder is a proponent of the servant leadership style, and has repeatedly pledged to maintain her family's legacy by refusing to ever sell or franchise In-N-Out. During her presidency, the number of In-N-Out locations has nearly doubled, from fewer than 250 stores to 400 as of December 2023, and the company now operates in eight states. She has also continued the tradition started by her uncle Rich of citing Bible verses on In-N-Out packaging, adding Proverbs 24:16 to the French fry containers, Luke 6:35 to the coffee cups and Isaiah 9:6 to the holiday cups.
In 2021, the Orange County Business Journal featured Snyder in the OC50, the annual listing of the 50 most influential executives in Orange County, and she was named the Los Angeles Business Journal 2021 Women’s Business Leadership Award’s CEO of the Year.
Since she began leading In-N-Out, Snyder has been consistently popular with the company's employees. In 2021, her 96% approval rating on Glassdoor made her the highest-rated female CEO in the United States.
In 2023, Snyder released her first book,, which became a USA Today and Wall Street Journal bestseller.

Wealth

Previously little known outside of her company, a then 30-year-old Snyder came to widespread public attention in 2013, when she was ranked a billionaire for the first time by the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, based on an In-N-Out valuation of $1.1 billion. Bloomberg also noted that she was the youngest female billionaire in North America. That same year, she ranked No. 93 on Maxim's annual Hot 100 list.
Snyder took ownership of her father's share of In-N-Out on her 30th birthday, and inherited the balance of the company that was not already in trust for her when her grandmother Esther died. In 2006, Snyder's inheritance had been valued at $450 million, but its value increased exponentially in subsequent years, as the company continued to grow. Snyder gained full control of the company when she turned 35.
In recent years, under Snyder's leadership, In-N-Out has gradually begun to expand at a more aggressive pace than before; in 2022, the company's estimated annual revenue topped $1.8 billion. According to Forbes, Snyder's personal net worth more than doubled in the five years between 2018 and 2023, increasing from $3 billion to $6.7 billion.

Politics

During the first half of 2025, Snyder donated $2 million to MAGA Inc., a super PAC that supports Donald Trump. During her presidency, In-N-Out Burger and affiliated entities have donated $275,000 to the California Republican Party and $750,000 to the Congressional Leadership Fund, a super PAC dedicated to electing Republicans to the U.S. House of Representatives. The company has also donated $180,000 to Californians for Jobs and a Strong Economy, a Super PAC dedicated to electing moderate and pro-business Democrats to the U.S. Senate.
In November 2021, Snyder had a phone call with Florida governor Ron DeSantis, during which DeSantis invited her to relocate In-N-Out's headquarters from Southern California to Florida or open a new distribution center in his state. Snyder reportedly thanked DeSantis for the offer but declined.

Philanthropy

Snyder co-founded Slave 2 Nothing, a non-profit corporation that exists to create, educate and assist in solutions to eliminate human trafficking and help individuals and their families to experience complete freedom and healing from substance addiction, with her husband Sean Ellingson in 2016. The foundation raises money and directs it to organizations that combat both substance abuse and human trafficking. In 2021, it made 96 grants totaling $1.7 million to nonprofit organizations in the seven states where In-N-Out has restaurants. In 2023, it made 117 grants totaling $2.5 million.
She is President of the In-N-Out Burger Foundation, which supports abused and neglected children, and was founded by her uncle Rich Snyder, grandmother Esther Snyder and mom Lynda Snyder.
In 2023, Snyder and In-N-Out made a significant financial contribution to Biola University in memory of Esther Snyder. The gift will help fund the creation of a new $92 million, 52,100-square-foot studio for the university's film students, and Biola subsequently renamed its film school the Snyder School of Cinema and Media Arts in the family's honor. While the size of Snyder's donation was not disclosed, it was the largest in the school's 115-year history, surpassing a $12 million gift in 2015.

Ministry

In 2014, Snyder and her husband Sean Ellingson founded Army of Love, a ministry with the goal to “enlist, train and equip an Army of Love to help people from all walks of life that are in need of support, prayer, encouragement, healing, direction, and freedom.” Volunteers “enlist” on the ministry’s website and take a discipleship training course before “deploying” to serve others in a variety of ways.

Personal life

Marriages and children

Snyder has been married four times and has four children. Her husbands have been:
  1. Jeremiah Seawell : Seawell was a local boy from Redding, California, whom she began dating at 14 years old. They married shortly after her 18th birthday, in summer 2000, and moved back to her hometown of Glendora. The couple separated within two years; their divorce was finalized in 2003.
  2. Richard Martinez : Snyder began dating former In-N-Out employee Richard Martinez in 2002. They married in 2004 and in November 2006, Snyder gave birth to fraternal twins. Snyder filed for divorce in September 2010, and this was finalized in late 2011.
  3. Val Torres Jr. : In 2010, while separated from Martinez, Snyder began dating Torres, a race car driver. In July 2011, Snyder gave birth to their son. Her divorce from Martinez was finalized later in 2011. Shortly after, she married Torres in a small ceremony. Snyder filed for divorce from Torres in 2013; the marriage officially ended the following year.
  4. Sean Ellingson : In May 2014, Snyder became engaged to Sean Ellingson, a native of La Verne, California, and a U.S. Army veteran. They married on July 7 of that year in Malibu, California. She gave birth to their son, her fourth child, in late 2014. Ellingson is the older brother of the late actor Evan Ellingson. Snyder and Ellingson work together in ministry.