What is Deborah Norville’s net worth? Inside Edition anchor’s fortune explored amid exit

Deborah Norville - Source: Photo by Patricia Schlein/Star Max/GC Images
Deborah Norville - Source: Photo by Patricia Schlein/Star Max/GC Images

Deborah Norville, 66, is set to depart Inside Edition after working for the syndicated television series for three decades. On April 2, she announced the news of her departure from the famous program via social media.

Amid news of her exit, netizens are curious to know more about her and how much net worth she has amassed as the longest-serving female anchor on U.S. national TV.

According to a Celebrity Net Worth report, Norville has a net worth of $18 million. The Inside Edition host earned an impressive salary of $4 million yearly while anchoring the American television program.

Here's everything we know about Deborah Norville's net worth and wealth

Deborah Norville and her husband, Karl Wellner, put a luxury Park Avenue property on the market in March 2019. They listed the 3,000 sq. ft. apartment for $4.5 million.

The journalist is also an author and wrote Knit with Deborah Norville: 18 Classic Designs for the Whole Family. Additionally, she has her own yarn line.

In 1995, Deborah joined Inside Edition and decided to conclude her long-term stint there in 2025, as she has "some exciting things in the works," which she will reveal later.

Her professional career trajectory includes being a part of several eminent shows and channels. She was associated with Today, WAGA-TV, 48 Hours, The Deborah Norville Show: From Her Home to Yours, CBS Evening News, CBS Sunday Evening News, Street Stories, America Tonight, NBC News, The Young and the Restless, The Game, Exposed With Deborah Norville, and Executed With Deborah Norville, among many others.

Since the beginning of her career, Deborah has worked relentlessly to become the renowned journalist that she is today. Despite working with Today, she did not have any work after leaving them.

She was associated with Today for over a year and did not join them after taking a break during her maternity leave. Katie Couric replaced her, and viewers loved her work.

As per a report by The New York Times, Deborah recalled the incident and shared,

"I was the center of a storm not of my making."

Later, she earned her living as a reporter and finally joined Inside Edition to co-anchor the program, per a Nicki Swift report.

In a conversation with the Atlanta Journal-Constitution about Inside Edition, Norville shared:

"I am feeling happy. I am proud of where this show is in this landscape."

Counting the perks of her job, she also added,

"I could drop the kids off at school. I couldn't pick them up but I could get home, cook and dinner and put them to bed."

Deborah won her first Emmy Award while working on NBC's Today show. She was honored with the recognition for covering the Democratic uprising in Romania, according to an Executive Speakers Bureau report.

She won her next Emmy in 1994 for her contributions to Street Stories and 48 Hours and for reporting on the 1994 Mississippi floods.

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Edited by Ritika Pal
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