Garth Brooks reveals how he's spent his millions

Country superstar Garth Brooks has revealed how he's spent his millions from his music career but worries he's "going to hell" because he hasn't "done enough" with his "incredible gifts".

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Garth Brooks has explained how he's spent his millions
Garth Brooks has explained how he's spent his millions

Garth Brooks has revealed how he's spent the millions of dollars he's made from his music career.

The 64-year-old country superstar has an estimated net worth of around $400 million after spending more than 40 years in the music industry and he's now explained he's put his money to good use by making sure his parents were taken care of and buying land for his daughters so they can ride horses.

He told The Times newspaper: "Money is the greatest gift because it allows you to make someone else happy. I can buy land so my girls can ride their horses. I can make sure their mother gets everything she wishes for. My first hit album took care of my mom and dad."

However, Garth admitted he is plagued by doubts as he worries he hasn't "done enough" with his "incredible gifts".

He added: "I try to have a few words with the man upstairs [God] before falling asleep. Sometimes I worry that I’m going to hell because I never feel I’ve done enough with the incredible gifts that he’s given me.

"But if I do wake up tomorrow, hey, it’s another opportunity to love somebody and to dream."

Garth has three grown-up daughters - Taylor, August and Allie - with his ex-wife Sandy Mahl and his currently married to fellow country singer Trisha Yearwood, who recently shared the secret to their happy 20-year marriage.

The 61-year-old singer - who wed the country superstar in 2005 - has revealed she learned from her two previous failed marriages that she needed to prioritise spending time with her husband because "marriages don't work if you're never together".

During an appearance at the In Her Own Words: An Evening with Trisha Yearwood event at The Paley Center for Media in New York City last year, she explained: "When I married Garth and I moved to Oklahoma, I stopped. I wasn't touring 200 days a year anymore.

"I was a bonus mom to three children and I was trying to make a marriage work, because I had learned that marriages don't work if you're never together. "That's kind of important. You have to be together. I made a conscious effort to be there, to go to soccer games and cook dinner."