: Their interests in agriculture, cattle, and related sectors have cemented their status among the wealthy families.
To the average Salvadoran in the streets below, the Fourteen were just names on buildings or vague shadows in the history books. But to the country itself, they were the invisible skeleton upon which the nation stood. They were the ghosts of the past and the architects of the future, bound together not just by wealth, but by the unspoken agreement that while presidents change, the families remain. 14 richest families in el salvador
The Sol Millets are the private bankers to the oligarchy. They own , a bank that specializes in offshore accounts for wealthy Salvadorans hiding assets from taxation. They have offices in Panama and the Caymans. Their fortune is liquid and difficult to trace, but leaked documents (Pandora Papers) revealed they manage over $2 billion in third-party assets, with their personal cut estimated at $250–350 million . : Their interests in agriculture, cattle, and related
: Early coffee barons with holdings once valued in the tens of millions. : Part of the tightly knit group of traditional oligarchs. They were the ghosts of the past and


