Eve Plumb, best known for playing Jan Brady on the beloved sitcom “The Brady Bunch,” has revealed that her time on the classic series did not leave her with a lifetime of financial comfort.
In her new memoir “Happiness Included: Jan Brady and Beyond,” Plumb candidly wrote, “If I had a dime for every rerun episode, I’d pay off the national deficit,” before sharply adding, “I don’t.”
The ABC series, which aired from 1969 to 1974, became a cultural touchstone and continues to replay across networks decades later.
The actress revealed how much the cast of ‘The Brady Bunch’ makes from residuals—and it’s much less than you might expect.https://t.co/x0gHSwIiae [1]
— The Daily Beast (@thedailybeast) May 13, 2026 [2]
Yet according to Plumb, the lucrative reruns have not translated into personal profit for the cast who brought the Brady family to life, as reported [3] by Page Six.
Speaking to PauseRewind in an interview cited by KOMO News, Plumb plainly stated, “We don’t make residuals.”
The statement underscored a long-standing truth among the actors who formed part of television history but never saw sustained financial returns from their success.
Plumb’s remarks echo what fellow cast members have admitted in years past. Barry Williams, who played Greg Brady, detailed similar experiences in his 1992 memoir “Growing Up Brady: I Was a Teenage Greg.”
He reflected that salaries were much lower for sitcom actors of the era and that the financial expectations for young performers were drastically different.
Williams wrote, “Salaries for sitcom actors have changed considerably since the ‘70s,” explaining that the highest-earning Brady child in the final season made $1,100 per week.
The final season included 22 episodes, meaning that the top-paid cast member took home just over $24,000 that year.
He noted that such an amount might have been “not bad for a teenager,” but once commissions, taxes, and family expenses were factored in, the sums were far less impressive.
“It was enough to indulge in toys, but hardly enough to carry you through the slow periods that inevitably followed,” he said.
Residual payments, according to Williams, vanished almost immediately after filming wrapped.
“Payments for subsequent airings of the show dried up shortly after we finished filming,” he added, highlighting how little the cast benefited from the rerun glory that followed.
Christopher Knight, who portrayed Peter Brady, shared a similar reflection in a 2025 episode of “The Real Brady Bros.” podcast.
In conversation with Williams, Knight said, “I believe the Bradys helped us in our family,” explaining that the modest earnings provided his household with enough “to pay the rent.”
Susan Olsen, known to fans as the youngest Brady sibling, Cindy, addressed public assumptions about the cast’s wealth during a 2013 appearance on Oprah Network’s “Where Are They Now.”
‘Brady Bunch’ star Eve Plumb reveals shocking truth about cast’s residual pay The hit sitcom about a blended family ran from 1969 to 1974 on ABC and has aired in reruns ever since. https://t.co/4FiHzYspoG [4] pic.twitter.com/XSK9UAXcpk [5]
— UnfilteredAmerica (@NahBabyNahNah) May 13, 2026 [6]
She explained that people often assume the actors became rich because the show airs so frequently. “People just think that, ‘Oh, I must be rich, we all must be rich,’” she said.
Olsen clarified that the situation wasn’t the result of bad contracts but rather a reflection of industry standards at the time. “This is the way things were before 1973,” she said, adding that actors were only “paid for reruns for the first 10 runs.”
She recalled that those checks stopped arriving around 1979. “So we made no money since then,” she said bluntly.
Although the lack of residuals disappointed many “Brady Bunch” stars, Plumb eventually found financial success outside of acting.
In 2016, she sold a Malibu beachfront property she had purchased at age 11 for just $55,300.
The home, bought during the original run of the series, sold for an impressive $3.9 million decades later, marking a sharply different outcome than her television earnings ever provided.
Her comments serve as a reminder of how the entertainment landscape has evolved for performers since the early days of syndicated television. For the “Brady Bunch” actors, the fame endured — but the checks did not.
Even after all these years, fans remain fascinated by how one of television’s most iconic families could be so visible on screen yet earn so little from their lasting legacy.
Plumb’s new memoir has reignited that conversation, giving readers a rare look behind one of Hollywood’s most cherished nostalgic hits.