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Scarlett Johansson Opens Up About Feeling A “Constant Deficit” At Home Despite $43M Earnings
Scarlett Johansson speaking in an interview, expressing feelings of constant deficit at home despite $43M earnings.

Scarlett Johansson Opens Up About Feeling A “Constant Deficit” At Home Despite $43M Earnings

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Scarlett Johansson has spent decades building one of the most successful careers in Hollywood, but the actress is now admitting that even a $43 million year does not erase the pressure waiting for her at home.

The Black Widow star, who Forbes named the highest-paid actress of 2025, spoke openly about the limits of success during an April 12 interview.

Highlights
  • Scarlett Johansson said maintaining a perfect work-life balance is “not possible” and admitted there is always a “deficit” somewhere in her life.
  • Forbes named Johansson the highest-paid actress of 2025 after she earned $43 million through acting, backend deals, residuals, and business ventures.
  • The actress is working on several upcoming projects including ‘The Batman: Part II,’ and ‘Scapegoat.’

For Johansson, the idea of a perfect work-life balance is not only unrealistic. It is something she believes people need to stop chasing before they can find a healthier way to live.

“I think actually admitting that there is no work-life balance is the first step to kind of getting there in a way, because it’s not possible,” the Marvel star said.

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    Scarlett Johansson spoke about the difficulty of trying to maintain a healthy work-life balance

    Image credits: JC Olivera/Getty Images

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    “There’s always something that is… there’s a deficit in some area,” she continued. “And I think you have to be… I learned to be more kind to myself. You can’t do all of these things all the time and so, you know… there’s just like… is it good enough?”

    Johansson’s comments come at a busy moment in her professional life.

    According to Forbes, the actress earned $43 million in 2025, making her the highest-paid actress of the year. Her earnings were reportedly tied to a combination of acting work, backend deals, residuals, and business ventures.

    That success, however, has not given her a clean answer to the daily demands of marriage, motherhood, acting, and entrepreneurship.

    Image credits: Michael Loccisano/Getty Images

    Johansson is currently balancing her marriage to comedian and writer Colin Jost, best known for his work on Saturday Night Live, while raising their children and continuing to take on major professional projects.

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    She and Jost tied the knot in October 2020. In August 2021, they welcomed their son, Cosmo. The couple also have a second child, a daughter, whose name has largely been kept private.

    Johansson also shares an 11-year-old daughter, Rose, with French journalist Romain Dauriac, to whom she was married from 2014 to 2017. Before that, she was married to actor Ryan Reynolds from 2008 to 2011.

    Her marriage to Jost is his first.

    Image credits: JustAnon_1

    Image credits: Black_X_elence

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    Beyond acting, Johansson is also one of the co-founders of The Outset, a clean-beauty skincare line launched in 2020. The brand has added another layer to her already crowded professional life, placing her in the position of actress, entrepreneur, wife, and mother at the same time.

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    “Somebody once told me, ‘If you’re successful as a parent like 75% of the time, that’s good,’” Johansson told CBS Sunday Morning.

    “If you’re doing 75% of it like right, then you’re winning, which is probably true.”

    Johansson’s financial success stands in sharp contrast to her low-income, welfare-dependent upbringing

    Image credits: Amy Sussman/Getty Images

    During a 2017 interview with Entertainment Tonight, the actress described growing up in a family that depended on government assistance.

    “We were living on welfare, we were on food stamps,” Johansson said at the time.

    “My parents were raising four kids in a low-income household in Manhattan. So, it was a lot.”

    Her rise began early, but one of the clearest turning points came with Sophia Copolla’s 2003 movie Lost in Translation, which helped establish Johansson as one of the defining young actresses of the early 2000s.

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    That period brought visibility, but it also came with a harsher kind of scrutiny.

    Image credits: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    In April, Johansson told People Magazine that entering the spotlight as a young woman in the early 2000s was especially difficult because of the way women were judged and limited by the industry.

    “I think growing up in the entertainment industry and being 20-something years old in the early 2000s, being a 20-year-old woman in the early 2000s in the spotlight, I think in general it was just a really harsh time,” Johansson said.

    “I think women were just pulled apart for how they looked in a way that was socially acceptable at the time, and it was tough,” she continued.

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    “There was a lot placed on how women looked and what was offered at that time for women my age as far as acting roles or opportunities, it was much slimmer than it is now.”

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    The actress has several projects in various stages of production that are expected to be released over the next year

    Image credits: moonreadersk

    In recent weeks, the actress has been tied to several major projects across film and television, adding to a workload that already includes acting, producing, business ventures, and parenting.

    Johansson is set to star in Scapegoat, director Ari Aster’s next film at A24 after Eddington. Aster will reportedly direct from his own script, with Johansson attached to lead the project.

    She has also joined the cast of The Batman: Part II, Matt Reeves’ sequel to the 2022 Robert Pattinson film.

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    Reeves has confirmed several cast additions, including Johansson, Sebastian Stan, Brian Tyree Henry, and Charles Dance, while the film is currently set for an October 1, 2027, theatrical release.

    Image credits: floplag

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    Image credits: CBS Sunday Morning/YouTube

    At the same time, Johansson’s latest completed work has already been moving through the festival circuit.

    James Gray’s Paper Tiger, which reunited Johansson with her Marriage Story co-star Adam Driver and also stars Miles Teller, premiered at the Cannes Film Festival on May 16, where it received a lengthy standing ovation.

    Johansson was not there to receive the reaction in person, reportedly because she was filming The Exorcist reboot in Los Angeles.

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    Her work behind the camera is also expanding. Deadline reported that Johansson is producing a Netflix series adaptation of The Nanny Diaries, the 2002 novel by Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus that she previously helped bring to the screen in the 2007 film version.

    The project is in development at Netflix, with Johansson attached as an executive producer.

    “Oh poor baby.” Many listeners found Johansson’s comments to be in bad taste

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    Abel Musa Miño

    Abel Musa Miño

    Writer, Entertainment News Writer

    Read more »

    Born in Santiago, Chile, with a background in communication and international relations, I bring a global perspective to entertainment reporting at Bored Panda. I cover celebrity news, Hollywood events, true crime, and viral stories that resonate across cultures. My reporting has been featured on Google News, connecting international audiences to the latest in entertainment. For me, journalism is about bridging local stories with global conversations, arming readers with the knowledge necessary to make up their own minds. Research is at the core of my work. I believe that well-sourced, factual storytelling is essential to building trust and driving meaningful engagement.

    Read less »
    Abel Musa Miño

    Abel Musa Miño

    Writer, Entertainment News Writer

    Born in Santiago, Chile, with a background in communication and international relations, I bring a global perspective to entertainment reporting at Bored Panda. I cover celebrity news, Hollywood events, true crime, and viral stories that resonate across cultures. My reporting has been featured on Google News, connecting international audiences to the latest in entertainment. For me, journalism is about bridging local stories with global conversations, arming readers with the knowledge necessary to make up their own minds. Research is at the core of my work. I believe that well-sourced, factual storytelling is essential to building trust and driving meaningful engagement.

    What do you think ?
    Gogubaci
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    everytime I read about some rich person complaining about their life it reminds me of that scene where woody harrelson wipes his tears with money

    That’s all I yam
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 day ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I like the message she is trying to get across: There is no such thing as a 'perfect' work / life balance. I have to believe that many professions experience this, especially when there are family commitments. In some professions, I think it's a given, doctors for one. In other professions, how well it's done is often a function of the time that's spent in preparation. For me, teaching was like that. I had to set limits on my preparation time so I had what I felt was sufficient family time, especially when my children were young. Could I have created better lesson plans? Sure, but the cost would have been time not focusing on my family, which I was unwilling to do. As my children grew older, more time was freed up and my lessons became better tailored for each class. To me, the idea of working smarter than harder is a matter of setting priorities and goals, and accepting the consequences; everything is a compromise and all commitments can't be 'perfectly done'.

    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Oh. How... sad for her. XD Sorry, I know she earned her money and I'm not saying she is a bad actress or anything, but it's certainly difficult to feel a ton of sympathy and empathy for someone who earned $43 million last year. I'm sure she does feel deficits in her life, but... she can afford medical care or surgical care if an emergency comes up and doesn't have to worry about affording healthcare. She probably has a personal chef and can afford fresh food. She doesn't have to repair old, damaged clothing because she can't afford new clothes. I currently can't even snag a min-wage job in my area because there are so many people applying/needing jobs, and I'm eating 99-cent ramen and $1.99 bags of Knorr rice because I can't afford fresher food. Money doesn't buy happiness, but it can buy you fewer worries than when you're poor.

    Megalodon Meg
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Thoughts and prayers don't do s**t so I will not offer any, but I really really hope things turn around for you and as cheesy as it sounds I do hold on to a shred of hope in the universe that eventually good things do come back to good people and sister, you fit the bill. Let me know if you're interested in my favorite actually filling/kind of nutritious struggle meals while the universe gets her s**t together.

    Load More Replies...
    6nzgftc4jw
    Community Member
    19 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Just another clickbait, bullish*t article that takes a celebrity's honest comments and frames them in a way to enrage people. Somehow, because she's made a lot of money, she's supposed to be happy all the time and live a well-balanced, stress-free life? Hmmmm...it doesn't work that way. For some people, lack of money causes the stress. For those with a lot of money, stress comes in other forms and those are just as valid. But SJ is a pretty and wealthy actor, so we have to hate her every time she admits some weakness, right? Ugh. The human race is so sad.

    That Persistent Lint
    Community Member
    1 day ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Oh... God forbades she complains! She's just saying she feels she's never done, that nothing is enough. Then the public comes back and says "well, dämn you for that, too". Nowhere this was about money... the title and the "analysts" of the interview made it so... I read it as personal fullfillment, and maybe external validation (maybe from someone in particular, who knows!). Some people had money, lost it, made it back and they don't feel more fullfilled or successful. In my opinion, reading life success as "getting by", "making it mainstream", "checking the conventional boxes" is very mediocre... but if I can understand that thats the dream for some, why can't others understand it's not everybody's dream? That someone can be happy having unconventional goals and feeling frustrated along the way of getting it?

    Megalodon Meg
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    You seem genuinely very sweet and empathetic and I really hope you are always able to hold on to that.

    Load More Replies...
    London Paris
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Rhe message remains teue and relevant regardless of the messenger. No, she DIDN'T have to start a skincare range but she wanted to and now employs twenty people and she is an active manager, not just a star who signed a contract to be the face of something but little involvement. Yep, scarjo is an international celebrity and doesn't HAVE to travel overseas but she continues to do so because she loves what she does, gets rewarded for it and that can all change tomorrow with a poorly received movie and her career dies overnight, imagine the mental anguish that provokes: she can do EVERYTHING right but STILL be caught in a disaster created by others . . . just like YOUR work, just like you. She is only as popular as the public allow. What Scarlett said was as true for her as anybody trying to have and hold onto a career whilst trying to bring up kids and have a life: its the message and not rhe messenger that's important.

    That Persistent Lint
    Community Member
    21 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Well said! It's so devastating seing mediocre thoughts such as "you have wealth, therefore you can't know what work-life balance struggle is"... That's just as an ignorant statement as "you don't have wealth, therefore you must be lazy"

    Load More Replies...
    The_Nicest_Misanthrope
    Community Member
    6 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Do these people genuinely think they deserve our sympathy?

    Unbored Panda
    Community Member
    22 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Are her nannies and housekeepers slacking?

    Roberta Surprenant
    Community Member
    23 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Another article about interview put her net worth, not last year's earnings, at $165mil. She doesn't need to make another dime and she is still set for life. Cry me a river.

    Megalodon Meg
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Like sure everyone has the right to complain about their lives and not be satisfied and all that jazz. And sure I'm sure she works hard and has difficulty with a busy schedule when she is working. But especially in these times, with s**t the way it is, it's tone deaf as f**k for celebrities, especially ones worth 40+ f*****g million to complain about work life balance after also throwing in a skincare line like she needed the extra money to support her family or some s**t. I'm privileged as f**k and I'll be the first to admit it. I came from nothing, literally from a f****d broken a*****e home, when I wasn't in foster care I was in shelters or on the literal street with my family, my husband barely had it better and we worked our asses off and luckily, because let's face it a lot of it is luck, are in a position that we can each hold down one job and support our family instead of the multiple that millions have to. And even with that privilege, and the huge f*****g privilege i have to

    Megalodon Meg
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    absolutely love my job, my work life balance is f*****g s**t. I pull 50-60 hours minimum and am on call 24/7. We both have missed and will miss a lot because when we aren't working we don't have a private chef, a maid, chauffeurs, accountants, tutors and all the other hired hands and luxuries she and all celebrities have. So stop f*****g complaining. If your money is such a f*****g problem, I know a f**k ton of people who would gladly take it of your hands. Rant over.

    Load More Replies...
    Gogubaci
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    everytime I read about some rich person complaining about their life it reminds me of that scene where woody harrelson wipes his tears with money

    That’s all I yam
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 day ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I like the message she is trying to get across: There is no such thing as a 'perfect' work / life balance. I have to believe that many professions experience this, especially when there are family commitments. In some professions, I think it's a given, doctors for one. In other professions, how well it's done is often a function of the time that's spent in preparation. For me, teaching was like that. I had to set limits on my preparation time so I had what I felt was sufficient family time, especially when my children were young. Could I have created better lesson plans? Sure, but the cost would have been time not focusing on my family, which I was unwilling to do. As my children grew older, more time was freed up and my lessons became better tailored for each class. To me, the idea of working smarter than harder is a matter of setting priorities and goals, and accepting the consequences; everything is a compromise and all commitments can't be 'perfectly done'.

    ADVERTISEMENT
    LakotaWolf (she/her)
    Community Member
    Premium
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Oh. How... sad for her. XD Sorry, I know she earned her money and I'm not saying she is a bad actress or anything, but it's certainly difficult to feel a ton of sympathy and empathy for someone who earned $43 million last year. I'm sure she does feel deficits in her life, but... she can afford medical care or surgical care if an emergency comes up and doesn't have to worry about affording healthcare. She probably has a personal chef and can afford fresh food. She doesn't have to repair old, damaged clothing because she can't afford new clothes. I currently can't even snag a min-wage job in my area because there are so many people applying/needing jobs, and I'm eating 99-cent ramen and $1.99 bags of Knorr rice because I can't afford fresher food. Money doesn't buy happiness, but it can buy you fewer worries than when you're poor.

    Megalodon Meg
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Thoughts and prayers don't do s**t so I will not offer any, but I really really hope things turn around for you and as cheesy as it sounds I do hold on to a shred of hope in the universe that eventually good things do come back to good people and sister, you fit the bill. Let me know if you're interested in my favorite actually filling/kind of nutritious struggle meals while the universe gets her s**t together.

    Load More Replies...
    6nzgftc4jw
    Community Member
    19 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Just another clickbait, bullish*t article that takes a celebrity's honest comments and frames them in a way to enrage people. Somehow, because she's made a lot of money, she's supposed to be happy all the time and live a well-balanced, stress-free life? Hmmmm...it doesn't work that way. For some people, lack of money causes the stress. For those with a lot of money, stress comes in other forms and those are just as valid. But SJ is a pretty and wealthy actor, so we have to hate her every time she admits some weakness, right? Ugh. The human race is so sad.

    That Persistent Lint
    Community Member
    1 day ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Oh... God forbades she complains! She's just saying she feels she's never done, that nothing is enough. Then the public comes back and says "well, dämn you for that, too". Nowhere this was about money... the title and the "analysts" of the interview made it so... I read it as personal fullfillment, and maybe external validation (maybe from someone in particular, who knows!). Some people had money, lost it, made it back and they don't feel more fullfilled or successful. In my opinion, reading life success as "getting by", "making it mainstream", "checking the conventional boxes" is very mediocre... but if I can understand that thats the dream for some, why can't others understand it's not everybody's dream? That someone can be happy having unconventional goals and feeling frustrated along the way of getting it?

    Megalodon Meg
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    You seem genuinely very sweet and empathetic and I really hope you are always able to hold on to that.

    Load More Replies...
    London Paris
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Rhe message remains teue and relevant regardless of the messenger. No, she DIDN'T have to start a skincare range but she wanted to and now employs twenty people and she is an active manager, not just a star who signed a contract to be the face of something but little involvement. Yep, scarjo is an international celebrity and doesn't HAVE to travel overseas but she continues to do so because she loves what she does, gets rewarded for it and that can all change tomorrow with a poorly received movie and her career dies overnight, imagine the mental anguish that provokes: she can do EVERYTHING right but STILL be caught in a disaster created by others . . . just like YOUR work, just like you. She is only as popular as the public allow. What Scarlett said was as true for her as anybody trying to have and hold onto a career whilst trying to bring up kids and have a life: its the message and not rhe messenger that's important.

    That Persistent Lint
    Community Member
    21 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Well said! It's so devastating seing mediocre thoughts such as "you have wealth, therefore you can't know what work-life balance struggle is"... That's just as an ignorant statement as "you don't have wealth, therefore you must be lazy"

    Load More Replies...
    The_Nicest_Misanthrope
    Community Member
    6 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Do these people genuinely think they deserve our sympathy?

    Unbored Panda
    Community Member
    22 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Are her nannies and housekeepers slacking?

    Roberta Surprenant
    Community Member
    23 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Another article about interview put her net worth, not last year's earnings, at $165mil. She doesn't need to make another dime and she is still set for life. Cry me a river.

    Megalodon Meg
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Like sure everyone has the right to complain about their lives and not be satisfied and all that jazz. And sure I'm sure she works hard and has difficulty with a busy schedule when she is working. But especially in these times, with s**t the way it is, it's tone deaf as f**k for celebrities, especially ones worth 40+ f*****g million to complain about work life balance after also throwing in a skincare line like she needed the extra money to support her family or some s**t. I'm privileged as f**k and I'll be the first to admit it. I came from nothing, literally from a f****d broken a*****e home, when I wasn't in foster care I was in shelters or on the literal street with my family, my husband barely had it better and we worked our asses off and luckily, because let's face it a lot of it is luck, are in a position that we can each hold down one job and support our family instead of the multiple that millions have to. And even with that privilege, and the huge f*****g privilege i have to

    Megalodon Meg
    Community Member
    1 day ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    absolutely love my job, my work life balance is f*****g s**t. I pull 50-60 hours minimum and am on call 24/7. We both have missed and will miss a lot because when we aren't working we don't have a private chef, a maid, chauffeurs, accountants, tutors and all the other hired hands and luxuries she and all celebrities have. So stop f*****g complaining. If your money is such a f*****g problem, I know a f**k ton of people who would gladly take it of your hands. Rant over.

    Load More Replies...
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