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{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name         = Patrick Collison
| name = Patrick Collison
| image        = Patrick Collison (cropped).jpg
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1988|9|9}}
| image_size  = 220px
| birth_place = Dromineer, [[County Tipperary]], Ireland
| caption      = Collison in 2015
| nationality = Irish
| birth_date   = {{Birth date and age|1988|9|9}}
| occupation = Technology executive, entrepreneur
| birth_place = [[Dromineer]], [[County Tipperary]], Ireland
| known_for = Co-founder and CEO of [[Stripe]], Fast Grants, Arc Institute
| nationality = Irish
| education = [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] (attended)
| education    = [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]]
| awards = BT Young Scientist of the Year (2005)
| occupation   = Technology executive, entrepreneur
| website = [http://patrickcollison.com/ patrickcollison.com]
| known_for   = [[Stripe, Inc.|Stripe]], [[Fast Grants]], [[Arc Institute]]
| awards       = BT Young Scientist of the Year (2005)
| website     = {{URL|patrickcollison.com}}
}}
}}


Patrick Collison (born 9 September 1988) is an Irish entrepreneur and technology executive who serves as the co-founder and chief executive officer of [[Stripe, Inc.|Stripe]], a financial infrastructure platform for internet businesses. Born in the rural village of [[Dromineer]] in [[County Tipperary]], Ireland, Collison demonstrated exceptional aptitude for science and technology from an early age, winning Ireland's prestigious [[BT Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition]] in 2005 at the age of sixteen.<ref>{{cite news |date=2005-01-14 |title=Young Scientist Winner Announced |url=http://www.rte.ie/news/2005/0114/9news.html |work=RTÉ News |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> He went on to attend the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] before dropping out to pursue entrepreneurship in [[Silicon Valley]]. Together with his younger brother [[John Collison]], he founded Stripe in 2010, building it into one of the most valuable private technology companies in the world.<ref>{{cite news |last=Mac |first=Ryan |date=2016-11-28 |title=Stripe Investment Makes Cofounder The World's Youngest Self-Made Billionaire |url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/ryanmac/2016/11/28/stripe-investment-makes-cofounder-the-worlds-youngest-self-made-billionaire/#4e3a548d41b4 |work=Forbes |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> Beyond Stripe, Collison has pursued philanthropic and scientific initiatives, co-founding Fast Grants in 2020 to accelerate funding for [[COVID-19]]-related research and co-founding the [[Arc Institute]], a nonprofit research organization, in 2021. In 2025, he was named to the [[TIME100]] Philanthropy list and was elected to the board of directors of [[Meta Platforms]].<ref>{{cite web |title=TIME100 Philanthropy: Patrick Collison |url=https://time.com/collections/time100-philanthropy-2025/7286061/patrick-collison/ |publisher=Time Magazine |date=2025-05-20 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Patrick Collison and Dina Powell McCormick to Join Meta Board of Directors |url=https://about.fb.com/news/2025/04/patrick-collison-and-dina-powell-mccormick-to-join-meta-board-of-directors/ |publisher=Meta |date=2025-04-11 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
'''Patrick Collison''' (born 9 September 1988) is an Irish entrepreneur and technology executive who serves as the co-founder and chief executive officer of [[Stripe]], the financial infrastructure and payments company he launched in 2010 alongside his younger brother, [[John Collison]]. Raised in the rural village of Dromineer in County Tipperary, Ireland, Collison showed an early aptitude for science and computing, winning Ireland's prestigious Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition in 2005 at the age of sixteen. He went on to attend the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] before leaving to pursue entrepreneurial ventures in Silicon Valley. Under his leadership, Stripe grew from a small startup offering a few lines of code for online payments into one of the most valuable private technology companies in the world. Beyond Stripe, Collison has been involved in scientific philanthropy, co-founding Fast Grants in 2020 to rapidly fund COVID-19-related research alongside economist Tyler Cowen, and co-founding the Arc Institute, a nonprofit biomedical research organization, in 2021. In April 2025, he was elected to the board of directors of Meta Platforms. Collison has also been recognized for his philanthropic contributions, being named to the TIME100 Philanthropy list in 2025.<ref>{{cite web |title=TIME100 Philanthropy: Patrick Collison |url=https://time.com/collections/time100-philanthropy-2025/7286061/patrick-collison/ |publisher=Time Magazine |date=2025-05-20 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


== Early Life ==
== Early Life ==


Patrick Collison was born on 9 September 1988 in [[Dromineer]], a small village on the shores of [[Lough Derg (Shannon)|Lough Derg]] in [[County Tipperary]], Ireland. He grew up in a rural setting, attending [[Gaelscoil]] Aonach Urmhumhan, an Irish-language primary school, before moving on to [[Castletroy College]] for his secondary education.<ref>{{cite web |title=Patrick Collison |url=http://patrickcollison.com/ |publisher=Patrick Collison (personal website) |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Patrick Collison was born on 9 September 1988 in Dromineer, a small village on the shores of Lough Derg in County Tipperary, Ireland. He grew up in a rural setting, and his early education included attendance at Gaelscoil Aonach Urmhumhan, an Irish-language primary school, followed by Castletroy College, a secondary school in County Limerick.<ref>{{cite web |title=Patrick Collison |url=http://patrickcollison.com/ |publisher=patrickcollison.com |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


Collison showed an early interest in computers and programming. As a teenager, he entered Ireland's [[BT Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition]], one of the country's most prominent science competitions for secondary school students. In January 2005, at the age of sixteen, he won the 41st edition of the competition with a project related to programming and artificial intelligence.<ref>{{cite news |date=2005-01-14 |title=Young Scientist Winner Announced |url=http://www.rte.ie/news/2005/0114/9news.html |work=RTÉ News |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> Reports from RTÉ noted that Collison had also participated in the 2004 edition of the exhibition.<ref>{{cite news |date=2004-01-09 |title=Young Scientist Competition |url=http://www.rte.ie/news/2004/0109/scientist.html |work=RTÉ News |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Collison demonstrated a precocious talent for science and technology from a young age. In January 2005, at the age of sixteen, he won the 41st BT Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition, one of the most prestigious science competitions for secondary school students in Ireland.<ref>{{cite news |date=2005-01-14 |title=BT Young Scientist of the Year |url=http://www.rte.ie/news/2005/0114/9news.html |work=RTÉ News |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> He had previously participated in the competition in 2004 as well.<ref>{{cite news |date=2004-01-09 |title=Young Scientist Exhibition |url=http://www.rte.ie/news/2004/0109/scientist.html |work=RTÉ News |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> The award brought national attention to the teenager from rural Tipperary and signaled the beginning of a trajectory that would take him from the Irish midlands to the center of the global technology industry.


His achievements at the Young Scientist competition brought him early national recognition in Ireland. The ''[[Evening Herald]]'' profiled Collison as a teenager who was already making an impact on the web, describing him as a "million dollar boy who changed the face of the web."<ref>{{cite news |title=Million Dollar Boy Who Changed the Face of the Web |url=http://www.herald.ie/lifestyle/money/million-dollar-boy-who-changed-the-face-of-the-web-1594088.html |work=Evening Herald |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> He was also featured on RTÉ television, appearing on the ''Miriam'' show in 2009.<ref>{{cite web |title=Miriam — 18 July 2009 |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090801122940/http://www.rte.ie/tv/miriam/20090718.html |publisher=RTÉ |date=2009-07-18 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Collison's brother, John Collison, who is approximately two years younger, would later become his business partner and co-founder at Stripe. The two brothers shared an interest in programming and technology, and their collaborative working relationship began during their teenage years in Ireland. The Collison brothers were featured in Irish media as notable young entrepreneurs and technologists, with outlets describing them as figures to watch in the Irish technology scene.<ref>{{cite web |title=Two to Watch |url=http://www.insideview.ie/irisheyes/2009/01/two-to-watch.html |publisher=InsideView.ie |date=2009-01 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


His younger brother, [[John Collison]], also demonstrated entrepreneurial and technical abilities from a young age. The two were profiled together in Irish media as entrepreneurs to watch.<ref>{{cite web |title=Two to Watch |url=http://www.insideview.ie/irisheyes/2009/01/two-to-watch.html |publisher=InsideView.ie |date=2009-01 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> Their shared interest in technology and business would later lead them to co-found Stripe.
By the time he was a teenager, Collison had already begun coding and developing software projects. His technical abilities, combined with his success at the Young Scientist competition, marked him as one of Ireland's most promising young minds in technology. Irish media covered his achievements extensively, including appearances on RTÉ television.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Miriam Show — Patrick Collison |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090801122940/http://www.rte.ie/tv/miriam/20090718.html |publisher=RTÉ |date=2009-07-18 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


== Education ==
== Education ==


Collison attended Gaelscoil Aonach Urmhumhan for primary school and Castletroy College for secondary school, both in Ireland. Following his successes at the Young Scientist competition and early entrepreneurial ventures, he enrolled at the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] (MIT) in the United States.<ref>{{cite web |title=Patrick Collison |url=http://patrickcollison.com/ |publisher=Patrick Collison (personal website) |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Collison attended Gaelscoil Aonach Urmhumhan for his primary education and Castletroy College for his secondary schooling, both in Ireland. After completing his secondary education and gaining recognition through the Young Scientist competition and early entrepreneurial work, he enrolled at the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]] (MIT) in the United States.


Collison did not complete his degree at MIT. He left the university to focus on building technology companies, a path that would eventually lead to the founding of Stripe. His departure from MIT to pursue entrepreneurship placed him among a cohort of prominent technology founders who left elite universities before graduating.
Collison ultimately left MIT to focus on his entrepreneurial ventures. His departure from the university followed a path taken by several other notable technology founders who left elite institutions to pursue startup opportunities in Silicon Valley. Despite not completing a degree, his time at MIT exposed him to the intellectual and entrepreneurial culture of the Boston and wider American technology ecosystem, which would prove instrumental in the founding of Stripe.


== Career ==
== Career ==
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=== Early Ventures ===
=== Early Ventures ===


Before founding Stripe, the Collison brothers were involved in earlier entrepreneurial projects. In 2008, [[BBC News]] reported on Patrick Collison's business activities, noting the young Irish entrepreneur's growing profile in the technology sector.<ref>{{cite news |date=2008-03-27 |title=Young Irish Entrepreneur |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7316143.stm |work=BBC News |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> RTÉ also covered Collison's early ventures, reporting on his activities in March 2008.<ref>{{cite news |date=2008-03-27 |title=Collison |url=http://www.rte.ie/news/2008/0327/collison.html?rss |work=RTÉ News |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Before founding Stripe, Collison and his brother John engaged in early entrepreneurial projects during their teenage years. In 2008, the Collison brothers gained attention in Irish and British media for their work in technology. The BBC reported on the brothers' activities in the business and technology space.<ref>{{cite news |date=2008-03-27 |title=Collison Brothers |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7316143.stm |work=BBC News |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> The ''Irish Independent'' profiled Patrick as a young entrepreneur who was reshaping aspects of the web.<ref>{{cite news |title=Million Dollar Boy Who Changed the Face of the Web |url=http://www.herald.ie/lifestyle/money/million-dollar-boy-who-changed-the-face-of-the-web-1594088.html |work=Irish Independent / Herald |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


The brothers' early work attracted attention in Ireland, where they were identified as emerging figures in the technology industry. A 2009 profile in InsideView listed the Collison brothers among entrepreneurs to watch in the Irish technology sector.<ref>{{cite web |title=Two to Watch |url=http://www.insideview.ie/irisheyes/2009/01/two-to-watch.html |publisher=InsideView.ie |date=2009-01 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Their early work attracted notice in the Irish startup community and provided the brothers with experience in building and selling software products. These formative entrepreneurial experiences laid the groundwork for what would become a far more ambitious undertaking in the payments industry.


=== Founding of Stripe ===
=== Founding of Stripe ===


In 2010, Patrick and [[John Collison]] founded Stripe, initially operating in stealth mode. The company's premise was to simplify online payments for developers and businesses by providing a set of application programming interfaces (APIs) that could be integrated with just a few lines of code. The company emerged from stealth in 2011, when [[TechCrunch]] reported on the payment startup, drawing comparisons to [[PayPal]] while noting Stripe's developer-first approach.<ref>{{cite news |date=2011-03-28 |title=Stealth Payment Startup Stripe |url=https://techcrunch.com/2011/03/28/stealth-payment-startup-stripe-paypal |work=TechCrunch |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
In 2010, Patrick and John Collison founded Stripe, a technology company focused on building economic infrastructure for the internet. The company's core product was a set of application programming interfaces (APIs) that allowed businesses to accept payments online. The founding premise was that integrating payments into a website or application was unnecessarily complex and that developers needed a simpler, more elegant solution. The initial version of Stripe's product allowed developers to begin accepting payments by integrating just a few lines of code into their websites.


A 2017 [[Bloomberg News|Bloomberg]] feature detailed how the Collison brothers built Stripe from what was described as "seven lines of code" into a $9.2 billion startup. The article chronicled the company's growth trajectory and the brothers' approach to building financial infrastructure for the internet economy.<ref>{{cite news |date=2017-08-01 |title=How Two Brothers Turned Seven Lines of Code Into a $9.2 Billion Startup |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2017-08-01/how-two-brothers-turned-seven-lines-of-code-into-a-9-2-billion-startup |work=Bloomberg |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Stripe emerged from stealth mode in 2011, attracting early attention from the technology press. TechCrunch covered the company's early emergence, noting its ambition to challenge established payment processors including PayPal.<ref>{{cite web |title=Stealth Payment Startup Stripe |url=https://techcrunch.com/2011/03/28/stealth-payment-startup-stripe-paypal |publisher=TechCrunch |date=2011-03-28 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> The company quickly gained traction among developers and startups who valued the simplicity and reliability of its API-first approach to payments processing.


Stripe's core product allowed businesses to accept payments online by integrating Stripe's APIs into their websites or applications. The simplicity of this approach—contrasted with the complexity of existing payment processing systems—helped Stripe gain adoption among developers and startups, and eventually among large enterprises. The company processed payments for businesses of varying sizes and expanded its product offerings over time to include billing, fraud prevention, and financial reporting tools.
Bloomberg later described the origin of Stripe as a story of "two brothers who turned seven lines of code into a $9.2 billion startup," underscoring the elegance of the product's initial design and the rapid growth trajectory that followed.<ref>{{cite news |title=How Two Brothers Turned Seven Lines of Code Into a $9.2 Billion Startup |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2017-08-01/how-two-brothers-turned-seven-lines-of-code-into-a-9-2-billion-startup |work=Bloomberg |date=2017-08-01 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


=== Growth and Valuation ===
=== Growth of Stripe ===


Stripe grew rapidly throughout the 2010s, securing successive rounds of venture capital funding at increasing valuations. In November 2016, [[Forbes]] reported that a new investment round had made Patrick Collison the world's youngest self-made billionaire.<ref>{{cite news |last=Mac |first=Ryan |date=2016-11-28 |title=Stripe Investment Makes Cofounder The World's Youngest Self-Made Billionaire |url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/ryanmac/2016/11/28/stripe-investment-makes-cofounder-the-worlds-youngest-self-made-billionaire/#4e3a548d41b4 |work=Forbes |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Under Patrick Collison's leadership as CEO, Stripe expanded rapidly from its initial payments product into a broader suite of financial infrastructure tools. The company attracted significant venture capital investment and grew its customer base to include some of the largest internet companies in the world, as well as millions of smaller businesses.


By September 2019, Bloomberg reported that the Collison brothers had become Ireland's richest self-made billionaires, a reflection of Stripe's continued growth in valuation.<ref>{{cite news |date=2019-09-20 |title=Stripe Brothers Become Ireland's Richest Self-Made Billionaires |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-09-20/stripe-brothers-become-ireland-s-richest-self-made-billionaires |work=Bloomberg |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
A major milestone came in 2016, when a new investment round valued Stripe at a level that made Patrick Collison one of the youngest self-made billionaires in the world. Forbes reported on the funding round and its implications for the Collison brothers' personal wealth.<ref>{{cite news |last=Mac |first=Ryan |date=2016-11-28 |title=Stripe Investment Makes Cofounder the World's Youngest Self-Made Billionaire |url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/ryanmac/2016/11/28/stripe-investment-makes-cofounder-the-worlds-youngest-self-made-billionaire/#4e3a548d41b4 |work=Forbes |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


The company attracted customers ranging from startups to major technology firms. [[Wired UK]] profiled Stripe's relationships with companies such as [[Apple Inc.|Apple]], [[Amazon (company)|Amazon]], and [[Facebook]], highlighting the platform's role in powering payments for some of the world's largest internet companies.<ref>{{cite news |title=Stripe Payments: Apple, Amazon, Facebook |url=https://www.wired.co.uk/article/stripe-payments-apple-amazon-facebook |work=Wired UK |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
By 2019, continued fundraising and growth had further increased the valuation of Stripe and the personal wealth of its founders. Bloomberg reported that the Collison brothers had become Ireland's richest self-made billionaires.<ref>{{cite news |title=Stripe Brothers Become Ireland's Richest Self-Made Billionaires |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-09-20/stripe-brothers-become-ireland-s-richest-self-made-billionaires |work=Bloomberg |date=2019-09-20 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


=== Stripe in the 2020s ===
Stripe's product line expanded over the years to include tools for billing, fraud prevention, corporate card issuance, business incorporation, and financial reporting. The company also expanded internationally, building infrastructure to support payments in dozens of countries. Wired profiled Stripe's work with major technology platforms including Apple, Amazon, and Facebook, highlighting the company's central role in global internet commerce.<ref>{{cite news |title=Stripe Payments: Apple, Amazon, Facebook |url=https://www.wired.co.uk/article/stripe-payments-apple-amazon-facebook |work=Wired UK |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


Under Collison's leadership as CEO, Stripe continued to expand its product suite and geographic reach into the 2020s. The company maintained its position as a significant player in the financial technology sector.
=== Stablecoins and Financial Innovation ===


In September 2025, Collison discussed the growing role of [[stablecoin]]s in business payments. [[Yahoo Finance]] reported on his explanation of why businesses were increasingly turning to stablecoins, noting that Stripe and [[Paradigm (venture capital firm)|Paradigm]] had launched a product called "Tempo" the day before his remarks.<ref>{{cite news |date=2025-09-06 |title=Stripe CEO Patrick Collison Explains Why Businesses Are Turning to Stablecoins |url=https://finance.yahoo.com/news/stripe-ceo-patrick-collison-explains-141645381.html?prefer_reader_view=1&prefer_safari=1 |work=Yahoo Finance |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
In 2025, Collison continued to steer Stripe into new areas of financial technology. In September 2025, he outlined the benefits that businesses were seeing from stablecoins, following the launch of a product called "Tempo" by Stripe in partnership with Paradigm. Yahoo Finance reported that Collison explained the growing interest among businesses in using stablecoins for payments and financial operations.<ref>{{cite news |title=Stripe CEO Patrick Collison Explains Why Businesses Are Turning to Stablecoins |url=https://finance.yahoo.com/news/stripe-ceo-patrick-collison-explains-141645381.html?prefer_reader_view=1&prefer_safari=1 |work=Yahoo Finance |date=2025-09-06 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> This development represented Stripe's continued expansion beyond traditional payment processing into emerging financial technologies.


In July 2025, Collison appeared on ''The New York Times'' podcast ''Hard Fork Live'', where he discussed Stripe and broader trends in the technology industry.<ref>{{cite news |date=2025-07-04 |title=Hard Fork Live, Part 2: Patrick Collison of Stripe, Kathryn Zealand of Skip, and Listener Questions |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/04/podcasts/hardfork-live-patrick-collison.html |work=The New York Times |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> In the same month, [[Business Insider]] reported on Collison's views on artificial intelligence, noting that he described AI as "terrific" for answering factual questions but expressed a preference for his own writing style over AI-generated text.<ref>{{cite news |date=2025-07-15 |title=Stripe's CEO says he loves asking AI questions — but it falls short in another area |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/stripe-ceo-patrick-collison-ai-ask-questions-writing-grok-2025-7 |work=Business Insider |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
=== Views on Artificial Intelligence ===


=== Meta Board Appointment ===
Collison has spoken publicly about the role of artificial intelligence in business and technology. In a 2025 interview reported by Business Insider, he described AI as "terrific" for answering factual questions, noting that he enjoyed using it to explore topics and gather information. However, he expressed a preference for his own writing style over AI-generated text, suggesting a nuanced view of the technology's capabilities and limitations.<ref>{{cite news |title=Stripe's CEO says he loves asking AI questions — but it falls short in another area |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/stripe-ceo-patrick-collison-ai-ask-questions-writing-grok-2025-7 |work=Business Insider |date=2025-07-15 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


On 11 April 2025, [[Meta Platforms]] announced that Patrick Collison and [[Dina Powell McCormick]] had been elected to the company's board of directors, effective 15 April 2025.<ref>{{cite web |title=Patrick Collison and Dina Powell McCormick to Join Meta Board of Directors |url=https://about.fb.com/news/2025/04/patrick-collison-and-dina-powell-mccormick-to-join-meta-board-of-directors/ |publisher=Meta |date=2025-04-11 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> Reuters and Axios both reported on the appointment, noting Collison's role as CEO of Stripe and his profile as a leading figure in the fintech industry.<ref>{{cite news |date=2025-04-11 |title=Meta to add Dina Powell McCormick, Patrick Collison to board |url=https://www.reuters.com/technology/meta-add-dina-powell-mccormick-patrick-collison-board-2025-04-11/ |work=Reuters |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |date=2025-04-11 |title=Exclusive: Meta adds Dina Powell McCormick, Patrick Collison to board |url=https://www.axios.com/2025/04/11/exclusive-meta-adds-dina-powell-mccormick-patrick-collison-to-board |work=Axios |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
In July 2025, Collison participated in the "Hard Fork Live" podcast hosted by The New York Times, where he discussed topics relevant to Stripe's business and the broader technology landscape.<ref>{{cite news |title=Hard Fork Live, Part 2: Patrick Collison of Stripe, Kathryn Zealand of Skip, and Listener Questions |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/04/podcasts/hardfork-live-patrick-collison.html |work=The New York Times |date=2025-07-04 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


The appointment placed Collison on the board of one of the world's largest technology companies, adding a governance role to his existing responsibilities as Stripe CEO.
=== Meta Board of Directors ===


=== Advocacy on Housing and Public Policy ===
On 11 April 2025, Meta Platforms announced that Patrick Collison had been elected to the company's board of directors, effective 15 April 2025. He joined the board alongside Dina Powell McCormick, a banking executive and former Republican government official.<ref name="meta-board">{{cite web |title=Patrick Collison and Dina Powell McCormick to Join Meta Board of Directors |url=https://about.fb.com/news/2025/04/patrick-collison-and-dina-powell-mccormick-to-join-meta-board-of-directors/ |publisher=Meta Platforms |date=2025-04-11 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> Reuters and Axios both reported on the appointments, noting Collison's role as CEO of the fintech firm Stripe.<ref>{{cite news |title=Meta to add Dina Powell McCormick, Patrick Collison to board |url=https://www.reuters.com/technology/meta-add-dina-powell-mccormick-patrick-collison-board-2025-04-11/ |work=Reuters |date=2025-04-11 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Exclusive: Meta adds Dina Powell McCormick, Patrick Collison to board |url=https://www.axios.com/2025/04/11/exclusive-meta-adds-dina-powell-mccormick-patrick-collison-to-board |work=Axios |date=2025-04-11 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> The appointment placed Collison in a governance role at one of the world's largest technology companies while he continued to serve as Stripe's CEO.


Collison has spoken publicly on issues related to housing policy and the cost of living in [[San Francisco]] and the broader [[San Francisco Bay Area|Bay Area]], where Stripe is headquartered. The ''[[San Francisco Business Times]]'' reported on Collison alongside other technology CEOs who addressed the housing crisis, noting the growing concern among tech leaders about the effects of housing costs on their employees and the wider community.<ref>{{cite news |date=2018-05-03 |title=Tech CEOs on the Housing Crisis |url=https://www.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/news/2018/05/03/tech-ceos-housing-crisis-stripe-salesforce-yelp.html |work=San Francisco Business Times |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
=== Public Policy and Housing ===


== Intellectual Interests and Writing ==
Collison has also engaged in public policy discussions, particularly regarding the housing crisis in the San Francisco Bay Area. In 2018, he was among several technology CEOs who spoke publicly about the housing affordability challenges facing technology workers and residents of the region. The San Francisco Business Times reported on the involvement of leaders from Stripe, Salesforce, Yelp, and other technology companies in addressing the issue.<ref>{{cite news |title=Tech CEOs Housing Crisis: Stripe, Salesforce, Yelp |url=https://www.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/news/2018/05/03/tech-ceos-housing-crisis-stripe-salesforce-yelp.html |work=San Francisco Business Times |date=2018-05-03 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


Collison maintains a personal website at patrickcollison.com, which includes a bookshelf page listing books he has read and recommends.<ref>{{cite web |title=Bookshelf |url=https://patrickcollison.com/bookshelf |publisher=Patrick Collison (personal website) |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> The breadth of his reading interests has been noted in media profiles.
== Scientific and Philanthropic Work ==


In November 2018, Collison co-authored an article in ''[[The Atlantic]]'' examining the question of whether scientific progress was experiencing diminishing returns. The piece explored trends in research productivity and the pace of scientific discovery.<ref>{{cite news |date=2018-11 |title=Diminishing Returns in Science |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2018/11/diminishing-returns-science/575665/ |work=The Atlantic |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> This interest in the mechanisms and pace of scientific research would later inform his philanthropic work, including Fast Grants and the Arc Institute.
=== Fast Grants ===


== Philanthropy and Scientific Initiatives ==
In 2020, amid the global COVID-19 pandemic, Collison co-founded Fast Grants with economist Tyler Cowen. The initiative was designed to provide rapid funding to scientists conducting research related to COVID-19, addressing what its founders perceived as the slow pace of traditional grant-making processes during an urgent public health crisis. Fast Grants aimed to deliver funding decisions within days rather than the months typically required by government and institutional funders, enabling researchers to begin or accelerate work on the pandemic without bureaucratic delays.
 
=== Arc Institute ===


=== Fast Grants ===
In 2021, Collison co-founded the Arc Institute, a nonprofit research organization focused on biomedical science, alongside bioscientists Silvana Konermann and Patrick Hsu. The Arc Institute was established to pursue a new model of scientific research, one that aimed to give researchers greater freedom and longer time horizons to pursue fundamental questions in biology and medicine.


In 2020, Collison co-founded Fast Grants with economist [[Tyler Cowen]]. The initiative was created to provide rapid funding for scientific research related to [[COVID-19]]. The program was designed to address what its founders saw as bottlenecks in the traditional scientific funding process, particularly the lengthy timelines for grant applications and approvals during a public health emergency. Fast Grants aimed to distribute funding within days rather than the months or years typical of conventional grant processes.
=== Science Policy and Research Productivity ===


=== Arc Institute ===
Collison has expressed interest in the broader questions of scientific progress and research productivity. In 2018, he contributed to discussions about what he and others described as the diminishing returns of scientific research. The Atlantic published an article examining this thesis, exploring the argument that despite increasing investment in research, the rate of breakthrough discoveries may be slowing.<ref>{{cite news |title=Diminishing Returns of Science |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2018/11/diminishing-returns-science/575665/ |work=The Atlantic |date=2018-11 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> These intellectual interests have informed Collison's philanthropic and institutional work aimed at improving the structures and incentives of scientific research.


In 2021, Collison co-founded the [[Arc Institute]], a nonprofit research organization, alongside bioscientists [[Silvana Konermann]] and Patrick Hsu. The institute was established to support fundamental biological research, with a focus on giving scientists greater freedom and stability to pursue long-term research questions without the constraints of traditional academic funding cycles.
=== TIME100 Philanthropy ===


These initiatives reflected Collison's broader interest in accelerating scientific progress, a theme he had explored in his 2018 ''Atlantic'' article on diminishing returns in science.<ref>{{cite news |date=2018-11 |title=Diminishing Returns in Science |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2018/11/diminishing-returns-science/575665/ |work=The Atlantic |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
In May 2025, Time Magazine named Collison to its TIME100 Philanthropy list, recognizing his contributions to scientific funding and research. The publication described his trajectory from "schoolboy coder in rural Ireland to Silicon Valley tech founder and billionaire philanthropist."<ref>{{cite web |title=TIME100 Philanthropy: Patrick Collison |url=https://time.com/collections/time100-philanthropy-2025/7286061/patrick-collison/ |publisher=Time Magazine |date=2025-05-20 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


== Personal Life ==
== Personal Life ==


Collison was born and raised in [[Dromineer]], [[County Tipperary]], Ireland. His younger brother, [[John Collison]], is the co-founder and president of Stripe. The brothers have been frequently profiled together in media coverage of Stripe and have been described as Ireland's richest self-made billionaires.<ref>{{cite news |date=2019-09-20 |title=Stripe Brothers Become Ireland's Richest Self-Made Billionaires |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-09-20/stripe-brothers-become-ireland-s-richest-self-made-billionaires |work=Bloomberg |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Collison is known to be an avid reader and maintains a public bookshelf on his personal website, listing books he has read and recommends.<ref>{{cite web |title=Patrick Collison's Bookshelf |url=https://patrickcollison.com/bookshelf |publisher=patrickcollison.com |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> His reading interests span a wide range of subjects including science, economics, history, and philosophy, reflecting the intellectual curiosity that has also shaped his approach to entrepreneurship and philanthropy.


Collison is known to be an avid reader. His personal website features an extensive bookshelf cataloguing his reading habits across a range of subjects, including science, history, philosophy, and economics.<ref>{{cite web |title=Bookshelf |url=https://patrickcollison.com/bookshelf |publisher=Patrick Collison (personal website) |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Born and raised in Ireland, Collison moved to the United States for his education and career. He maintains connections to Ireland and has been the subject of extensive coverage in Irish media throughout his career. The ''Irish Times'' featured the Collison brothers in a profile examining the legacy of the Young Scientist competition and the paths taken by its winners.<ref>{{cite news |title=Young Scientists: Where Creativity and Charm Collide |url=https://www.irishtimes.com/business/technology/young-scientists-where-creativity-and-charm-collide-1.3357542 |work=The Irish Times |date=2018 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


''Time'' magazine described Collison's trajectory as a rise "from schoolboy coder in rural Ireland to Silicon Valley tech founder and billionaire philanthropist."<ref>{{cite web |title=TIME100 Philanthropy: Patrick Collison |url=https://time.com/collections/time100-philanthropy-2025/7286061/patrick-collison/ |publisher=Time Magazine |date=2025-05-20 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Collison's brother, John Collison, serves as President of Stripe, making the two siblings one of the most prominent brother partnerships in the global technology industry.


== Recognition ==
== Recognition ==


Collison's earliest public recognition came through the [[BT Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition]] in Ireland. He participated in the 2004 exhibition and won the overall prize in 2005 at the age of sixteen.<ref>{{cite news |date=2005-01-14 |title=Young Scientist Winner Announced |url=http://www.rte.ie/news/2005/0114/9news.html |work=RTÉ News |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |date=2004-01-09 |title=Young Scientist Competition |url=http://www.rte.ie/news/2004/0109/scientist.html |work=RTÉ News |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref> The ''[[Irish Times]]'' later reflected on the Young Scientist competition and the achievements of its notable winners, including Collison.<ref>{{cite news |title=Young Scientists: Where Creativity and Charm Collide |url=https://www.irishtimes.com/business/technology/young-scientists-where-creativity-and-charm-collide-1.3357542 |work=The Irish Times |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Collison has received a number of recognitions and awards over the course of his career. His earliest major award was the BT Young Scientist of the Year in 2005, which he won at the age of sixteen at the 41st Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition in Ireland.<ref>{{cite news |date=2005-01-14 |title=BT Young Scientist of the Year |url=http://www.rte.ie/news/2005/0114/9news.html |work=RTÉ News |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


In November 2016, a funding round for Stripe led ''Forbes'' to identify Collison as the world's youngest self-made billionaire at the time.<ref>{{cite news |last=Mac |first=Ryan |date=2016-11-28 |title=Stripe Investment Makes Cofounder The World's Youngest Self-Made Billionaire |url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/ryanmac/2016/11/28/stripe-investment-makes-cofounder-the-worlds-youngest-self-made-billionaire/#4e3a548d41b4 |work=Forbes |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Forbes identified him as one of the world's youngest self-made billionaires following Stripe's 2016 funding round.<ref>{{cite news |last=Mac |first=Ryan |date=2016-11-28 |title=Stripe Investment Makes Cofounder the World's Youngest Self-Made Billionaire |url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/ryanmac/2016/11/28/stripe-investment-makes-cofounder-the-worlds-youngest-self-made-billionaire/#4e3a548d41b4 |work=Forbes |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


In May 2025, ''Time'' magazine named Collison to its TIME100 Philanthropy list, recognizing his contributions through Fast Grants, the Arc Institute, and other philanthropic efforts.<ref>{{cite web |title=TIME100 Philanthropy: Patrick Collison |url=https://time.com/collections/time100-philanthropy-2025/7286061/patrick-collison/ |publisher=Time Magazine |date=2025-05-20 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
In 2025, he was named to the TIME100 Philanthropy list for his contributions to scientific funding and research through initiatives including Fast Grants and the Arc Institute.<ref>{{cite web |title=TIME100 Philanthropy: Patrick Collison |url=https://time.com/collections/time100-philanthropy-2025/7286061/patrick-collison/ |publisher=Time Magazine |date=2025-05-20 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


In April 2025, he was elected to the board of directors of [[Meta Platforms]], one of the world's largest technology companies.<ref>{{cite web |title=Patrick Collison and Dina Powell McCormick to Join Meta Board of Directors |url=https://about.fb.com/news/2025/04/patrick-collison-and-dina-powell-mccormick-to-join-meta-board-of-directors/ |publisher=Meta |date=2025-04-11 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
His election to the board of directors of Meta Platforms in April 2025 represented a further marker of his standing in the global technology industry.<ref name="meta-board" />


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==


Patrick Collison's founding of Stripe has had a measurable impact on how businesses process payments online. The company's developer-oriented approach to financial infrastructure helped establish a model in which complex financial services could be accessed through simple software integrations. Bloomberg's 2017 feature on the company highlighted how the Collison brothers' approach—reducing the integration of payments to a handful of lines of code—helped reshape the online payments industry.<ref>{{cite news |date=2017-08-01 |title=How Two Brothers Turned Seven Lines of Code Into a $9.2 Billion Startup |url=https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2017-08-01/how-two-brothers-turned-seven-lines-of-code-into-a-9-2-billion-startup |work=Bloomberg |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Patrick Collison's career has been defined by the intersection of technology, finance, and scientific philanthropy. Through Stripe, he and his brother built a company that fundamentally altered how businesses accept payments online, making it possible for millions of companies worldwide to participate in internet commerce with minimal technical friction. The company's API-first approach to payments infrastructure influenced the broader fintech industry and established a model that other technology companies have sought to replicate.


Beyond Stripe, Collison's work with Fast Grants and the Arc Institute represents an effort to address structural issues in scientific funding. His 2018 article in ''The Atlantic'' on diminishing returns in science provided a public intellectual framework for his later philanthropic initiatives, which aimed to reduce bureaucratic barriers to scientific research and accelerate the pace of discovery.<ref>{{cite news |date=2018-11 |title=Diminishing Returns in Science |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2018/11/diminishing-returns-science/575665/ |work=The Atlantic |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
Beyond his work at Stripe, Collison's involvement in scientific funding through Fast Grants and the Arc Institute represents an effort to apply the principles of speed and efficiency that characterized Stripe's approach to payments to the slower-moving world of academic and biomedical research. His public writings and discussions on the topic of scientific productivity have contributed to a broader conversation about how modern institutions support — or fail to support — the pace of scientific discovery.


His appointment to Meta's board of directors in 2025, alongside his continued leadership of Stripe, positions Collison as a figure with influence across multiple sectors of the technology industry. His trajectory from rural Ireland to the leadership of a major fintech company and a board seat at one of the world's largest social media companies has been noted in media profiles as an example of the global reach of the technology sector.<ref>{{cite web |title=TIME100 Philanthropy: Patrick Collison |url=https://time.com/collections/time100-philanthropy-2025/7286061/patrick-collison/ |publisher=Time Magazine |date=2025-05-20 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>
As an Irish-born entrepreneur who achieved significant success in Silicon Valley, Collison has also become a prominent figure in Ireland's relationship with the global technology industry. His path from winning the Young Scientist competition as a teenager to leading one of the world's most valuable private technology companies has been cited in Irish media as an example of the country's capacity to produce globally significant entrepreneurs.<ref>{{cite news |title=Young Scientists: Where Creativity and Charm Collide |url=https://www.irishtimes.com/business/technology/young-scientists-where-creativity-and-charm-collide-1.3357542 |work=The Irish Times |date=2018 |access-date=2026-02-23}}</ref>


== References ==
== References ==
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Latest revision as of 01:48, 24 February 2026



Patrick Collison
Born9 9, 1988
BirthplaceDromineer, County Tipperary, Ireland
NationalityIrish
OccupationTechnology executive, entrepreneur
Known forCo-founder and CEO of Stripe, Fast Grants, Arc Institute
EducationMassachusetts Institute of Technology (attended)
AwardsBT Young Scientist of the Year (2005)
Website[patrickcollison.com Official site]

Patrick Collison (born 9 September 1988) is an Irish entrepreneur and technology executive who serves as the co-founder and chief executive officer of Stripe, the financial infrastructure and payments company he launched in 2010 alongside his younger brother, John Collison. Raised in the rural village of Dromineer in County Tipperary, Ireland, Collison showed an early aptitude for science and computing, winning Ireland's prestigious Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition in 2005 at the age of sixteen. He went on to attend the Massachusetts Institute of Technology before leaving to pursue entrepreneurial ventures in Silicon Valley. Under his leadership, Stripe grew from a small startup offering a few lines of code for online payments into one of the most valuable private technology companies in the world. Beyond Stripe, Collison has been involved in scientific philanthropy, co-founding Fast Grants in 2020 to rapidly fund COVID-19-related research alongside economist Tyler Cowen, and co-founding the Arc Institute, a nonprofit biomedical research organization, in 2021. In April 2025, he was elected to the board of directors of Meta Platforms. Collison has also been recognized for his philanthropic contributions, being named to the TIME100 Philanthropy list in 2025.[1]

Early Life

Patrick Collison was born on 9 September 1988 in Dromineer, a small village on the shores of Lough Derg in County Tipperary, Ireland. He grew up in a rural setting, and his early education included attendance at Gaelscoil Aonach Urmhumhan, an Irish-language primary school, followed by Castletroy College, a secondary school in County Limerick.[2]

Collison demonstrated a precocious talent for science and technology from a young age. In January 2005, at the age of sixteen, he won the 41st BT Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition, one of the most prestigious science competitions for secondary school students in Ireland.[3] He had previously participated in the competition in 2004 as well.[4] The award brought national attention to the teenager from rural Tipperary and signaled the beginning of a trajectory that would take him from the Irish midlands to the center of the global technology industry.

Collison's brother, John Collison, who is approximately two years younger, would later become his business partner and co-founder at Stripe. The two brothers shared an interest in programming and technology, and their collaborative working relationship began during their teenage years in Ireland. The Collison brothers were featured in Irish media as notable young entrepreneurs and technologists, with outlets describing them as figures to watch in the Irish technology scene.[5]

By the time he was a teenager, Collison had already begun coding and developing software projects. His technical abilities, combined with his success at the Young Scientist competition, marked him as one of Ireland's most promising young minds in technology. Irish media covered his achievements extensively, including appearances on RTÉ television.[6]

Education

Collison attended Gaelscoil Aonach Urmhumhan for his primary education and Castletroy College for his secondary schooling, both in Ireland. After completing his secondary education and gaining recognition through the Young Scientist competition and early entrepreneurial work, he enrolled at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the United States.

Collison ultimately left MIT to focus on his entrepreneurial ventures. His departure from the university followed a path taken by several other notable technology founders who left elite institutions to pursue startup opportunities in Silicon Valley. Despite not completing a degree, his time at MIT exposed him to the intellectual and entrepreneurial culture of the Boston and wider American technology ecosystem, which would prove instrumental in the founding of Stripe.

Career

Early Ventures

Before founding Stripe, Collison and his brother John engaged in early entrepreneurial projects during their teenage years. In 2008, the Collison brothers gained attention in Irish and British media for their work in technology. The BBC reported on the brothers' activities in the business and technology space.[7] The Irish Independent profiled Patrick as a young entrepreneur who was reshaping aspects of the web.[8]

Their early work attracted notice in the Irish startup community and provided the brothers with experience in building and selling software products. These formative entrepreneurial experiences laid the groundwork for what would become a far more ambitious undertaking in the payments industry.

Founding of Stripe

In 2010, Patrick and John Collison founded Stripe, a technology company focused on building economic infrastructure for the internet. The company's core product was a set of application programming interfaces (APIs) that allowed businesses to accept payments online. The founding premise was that integrating payments into a website or application was unnecessarily complex and that developers needed a simpler, more elegant solution. The initial version of Stripe's product allowed developers to begin accepting payments by integrating just a few lines of code into their websites.

Stripe emerged from stealth mode in 2011, attracting early attention from the technology press. TechCrunch covered the company's early emergence, noting its ambition to challenge established payment processors including PayPal.[9] The company quickly gained traction among developers and startups who valued the simplicity and reliability of its API-first approach to payments processing.

Bloomberg later described the origin of Stripe as a story of "two brothers who turned seven lines of code into a $9.2 billion startup," underscoring the elegance of the product's initial design and the rapid growth trajectory that followed.[10]

Growth of Stripe

Under Patrick Collison's leadership as CEO, Stripe expanded rapidly from its initial payments product into a broader suite of financial infrastructure tools. The company attracted significant venture capital investment and grew its customer base to include some of the largest internet companies in the world, as well as millions of smaller businesses.

A major milestone came in 2016, when a new investment round valued Stripe at a level that made Patrick Collison one of the youngest self-made billionaires in the world. Forbes reported on the funding round and its implications for the Collison brothers' personal wealth.[11]

By 2019, continued fundraising and growth had further increased the valuation of Stripe and the personal wealth of its founders. Bloomberg reported that the Collison brothers had become Ireland's richest self-made billionaires.[12]

Stripe's product line expanded over the years to include tools for billing, fraud prevention, corporate card issuance, business incorporation, and financial reporting. The company also expanded internationally, building infrastructure to support payments in dozens of countries. Wired profiled Stripe's work with major technology platforms including Apple, Amazon, and Facebook, highlighting the company's central role in global internet commerce.[13]

Stablecoins and Financial Innovation

In 2025, Collison continued to steer Stripe into new areas of financial technology. In September 2025, he outlined the benefits that businesses were seeing from stablecoins, following the launch of a product called "Tempo" by Stripe in partnership with Paradigm. Yahoo Finance reported that Collison explained the growing interest among businesses in using stablecoins for payments and financial operations.[14] This development represented Stripe's continued expansion beyond traditional payment processing into emerging financial technologies.

Views on Artificial Intelligence

Collison has spoken publicly about the role of artificial intelligence in business and technology. In a 2025 interview reported by Business Insider, he described AI as "terrific" for answering factual questions, noting that he enjoyed using it to explore topics and gather information. However, he expressed a preference for his own writing style over AI-generated text, suggesting a nuanced view of the technology's capabilities and limitations.[15]

In July 2025, Collison participated in the "Hard Fork Live" podcast hosted by The New York Times, where he discussed topics relevant to Stripe's business and the broader technology landscape.[16]

Meta Board of Directors

On 11 April 2025, Meta Platforms announced that Patrick Collison had been elected to the company's board of directors, effective 15 April 2025. He joined the board alongside Dina Powell McCormick, a banking executive and former Republican government official.[17] Reuters and Axios both reported on the appointments, noting Collison's role as CEO of the fintech firm Stripe.[18][19] The appointment placed Collison in a governance role at one of the world's largest technology companies while he continued to serve as Stripe's CEO.

Public Policy and Housing

Collison has also engaged in public policy discussions, particularly regarding the housing crisis in the San Francisco Bay Area. In 2018, he was among several technology CEOs who spoke publicly about the housing affordability challenges facing technology workers and residents of the region. The San Francisco Business Times reported on the involvement of leaders from Stripe, Salesforce, Yelp, and other technology companies in addressing the issue.[20]

Scientific and Philanthropic Work

Fast Grants

In 2020, amid the global COVID-19 pandemic, Collison co-founded Fast Grants with economist Tyler Cowen. The initiative was designed to provide rapid funding to scientists conducting research related to COVID-19, addressing what its founders perceived as the slow pace of traditional grant-making processes during an urgent public health crisis. Fast Grants aimed to deliver funding decisions within days rather than the months typically required by government and institutional funders, enabling researchers to begin or accelerate work on the pandemic without bureaucratic delays.

Arc Institute

In 2021, Collison co-founded the Arc Institute, a nonprofit research organization focused on biomedical science, alongside bioscientists Silvana Konermann and Patrick Hsu. The Arc Institute was established to pursue a new model of scientific research, one that aimed to give researchers greater freedom and longer time horizons to pursue fundamental questions in biology and medicine.

Science Policy and Research Productivity

Collison has expressed interest in the broader questions of scientific progress and research productivity. In 2018, he contributed to discussions about what he and others described as the diminishing returns of scientific research. The Atlantic published an article examining this thesis, exploring the argument that despite increasing investment in research, the rate of breakthrough discoveries may be slowing.[21] These intellectual interests have informed Collison's philanthropic and institutional work aimed at improving the structures and incentives of scientific research.

TIME100 Philanthropy

In May 2025, Time Magazine named Collison to its TIME100 Philanthropy list, recognizing his contributions to scientific funding and research. The publication described his trajectory from "schoolboy coder in rural Ireland to Silicon Valley tech founder and billionaire philanthropist."[22]

Personal Life

Collison is known to be an avid reader and maintains a public bookshelf on his personal website, listing books he has read and recommends.[23] His reading interests span a wide range of subjects including science, economics, history, and philosophy, reflecting the intellectual curiosity that has also shaped his approach to entrepreneurship and philanthropy.

Born and raised in Ireland, Collison moved to the United States for his education and career. He maintains connections to Ireland and has been the subject of extensive coverage in Irish media throughout his career. The Irish Times featured the Collison brothers in a profile examining the legacy of the Young Scientist competition and the paths taken by its winners.[24]

Collison's brother, John Collison, serves as President of Stripe, making the two siblings one of the most prominent brother partnerships in the global technology industry.

Recognition

Collison has received a number of recognitions and awards over the course of his career. His earliest major award was the BT Young Scientist of the Year in 2005, which he won at the age of sixteen at the 41st Young Scientist and Technology Exhibition in Ireland.[25]

Forbes identified him as one of the world's youngest self-made billionaires following Stripe's 2016 funding round.[26]

In 2025, he was named to the TIME100 Philanthropy list for his contributions to scientific funding and research through initiatives including Fast Grants and the Arc Institute.[27]

His election to the board of directors of Meta Platforms in April 2025 represented a further marker of his standing in the global technology industry.[17]

Legacy

Patrick Collison's career has been defined by the intersection of technology, finance, and scientific philanthropy. Through Stripe, he and his brother built a company that fundamentally altered how businesses accept payments online, making it possible for millions of companies worldwide to participate in internet commerce with minimal technical friction. The company's API-first approach to payments infrastructure influenced the broader fintech industry and established a model that other technology companies have sought to replicate.

Beyond his work at Stripe, Collison's involvement in scientific funding through Fast Grants and the Arc Institute represents an effort to apply the principles of speed and efficiency that characterized Stripe's approach to payments to the slower-moving world of academic and biomedical research. His public writings and discussions on the topic of scientific productivity have contributed to a broader conversation about how modern institutions support — or fail to support — the pace of scientific discovery.

As an Irish-born entrepreneur who achieved significant success in Silicon Valley, Collison has also become a prominent figure in Ireland's relationship with the global technology industry. His path from winning the Young Scientist competition as a teenager to leading one of the world's most valuable private technology companies has been cited in Irish media as an example of the country's capacity to produce globally significant entrepreneurs.[28]

References

  1. "TIME100 Philanthropy: Patrick Collison".Time Magazine.2025-05-20.https://time.com/collections/time100-philanthropy-2025/7286061/patrick-collison/.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  2. "Patrick Collison".patrickcollison.com.http://patrickcollison.com/.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  3. "BT Young Scientist of the Year".RTÉ News.2005-01-14.http://www.rte.ie/news/2005/0114/9news.html.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  4. "Young Scientist Exhibition".RTÉ News.2004-01-09.http://www.rte.ie/news/2004/0109/scientist.html.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  5. "Two to Watch".InsideView.ie.2009-01.http://www.insideview.ie/irisheyes/2009/01/two-to-watch.html.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  6. "The Miriam Show — Patrick Collison".RTÉ.2009-07-18.https://web.archive.org/web/20090801122940/http://www.rte.ie/tv/miriam/20090718.html.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  7. "Collison Brothers".BBC News.2008-03-27.http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7316143.stm.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  8. "Million Dollar Boy Who Changed the Face of the Web".Irish Independent / Herald.http://www.herald.ie/lifestyle/money/million-dollar-boy-who-changed-the-face-of-the-web-1594088.html.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  9. "Stealth Payment Startup Stripe".TechCrunch.2011-03-28.https://techcrunch.com/2011/03/28/stealth-payment-startup-stripe-paypal.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  10. "How Two Brothers Turned Seven Lines of Code Into a $9.2 Billion Startup".Bloomberg.2017-08-01.https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2017-08-01/how-two-brothers-turned-seven-lines-of-code-into-a-9-2-billion-startup.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  11. MacRyanRyan"Stripe Investment Makes Cofounder the World's Youngest Self-Made Billionaire".Forbes.2016-11-28.https://www.forbes.com/sites/ryanmac/2016/11/28/stripe-investment-makes-cofounder-the-worlds-youngest-self-made-billionaire/#4e3a548d41b4.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  12. "Stripe Brothers Become Ireland's Richest Self-Made Billionaires".Bloomberg.2019-09-20.https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-09-20/stripe-brothers-become-ireland-s-richest-self-made-billionaires.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  13. "Stripe Payments: Apple, Amazon, Facebook".Wired UK.https://www.wired.co.uk/article/stripe-payments-apple-amazon-facebook.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  14. "Stripe CEO Patrick Collison Explains Why Businesses Are Turning to Stablecoins".Yahoo Finance.2025-09-06.https://finance.yahoo.com/news/stripe-ceo-patrick-collison-explains-141645381.html?prefer_reader_view=1&prefer_safari=1.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  15. "Stripe's CEO says he loves asking AI questions — but it falls short in another area".Business Insider.2025-07-15.https://www.businessinsider.com/stripe-ceo-patrick-collison-ai-ask-questions-writing-grok-2025-7.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  16. "Hard Fork Live, Part 2: Patrick Collison of Stripe, Kathryn Zealand of Skip, and Listener Questions".The New York Times.2025-07-04.https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/04/podcasts/hardfork-live-patrick-collison.html.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
  17. 17.0 17.1 "Patrick Collison and Dina Powell McCormick to Join Meta Board of Directors".Meta Platforms.2025-04-11.https://about.fb.com/news/2025/04/patrick-collison-and-dina-powell-mccormick-to-join-meta-board-of-directors/.Retrieved 2026-02-23.
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