[1] In 2013, Koç was the single highest taxpayer in Turkey, totalling 37.5 million lira.
[3] He attended high school at Robert College in Istanbul after his primary education in Ankara.
Rahmi Koç then studied at the Johns Hopkins University and received a BA in industrial management.
[4] Following his military service, he started actively working for the Koç Group in 1958, joining the Otokoç Company in Ankara.
[7] A visit to Henry Ford Museum in Michigan inspired him to create the Rahmi M. Koç Museum in Istanbul, which is dedicated to the history of transport, industry and communications exhibiting trains, submarines and autos.