The Highest-Paid YouTube Stars Of 2020 (2023)

A nine-year-old is still number one, but the runner-up is a newcomer who came armed with a forklift, an exploding Toyota and the most expensive firecracker ever made. And he’s just getting started.

The Fourth of July this past summer was a muted occasion across most of the country. But not on YouTube, where Jimmy Donaldson, the digital celebrity known as MrBeast, released a special holiday episode containing a $600,000 fireworks show. The show’s highlights included lighting 100 or so rockets bound to a mannequin, blowing up a Toyota and detonating the world’s most-expensive firework, a 400-pound, $160,000 device moveable only via forklift. The aerial display even forced MrBeast and his crew to consult the FAA, lest it interfere with overhead air traffic.

The 11-minute episode has since been viewed nearly 60 million times, and it’s pretty representative of what has shot Donaldson to No. 2 on our annual list of the Top-Earning YouTubers. Funny stunts have been a YouTube mainstay for years. But none have really been on the same scale as Donaldson’s or filmed with such top-notch production quality. He’s also become famous for videos of giving away massive amounts of money, like the moment this spring when he dispensed $200,000 to several people who’d lost their jobs during the pandemic. It’s been seen 23 million times.

“The ideas are going to continue to get crazier, and he's going to continue to spend large amounts of money to up the production quality,” promises Reed Duchscher, Donaldson’s manager. (MrBeast may love the digital spotlight, but he’s pretty shy—and wouldn’t comment for this story.) “I mean, he just tweeted out today that he has all these good ideas that cost $10 million. And he's not wrong. He does.”

He may soon get a chance to spend that kind of money: Business on YouTube is booming. Donaldson and the other highest-paid YouTubers secured an estimated $211 million in total earnings from June 1, 2019 to June 1, 2020, a 30% jump from the previous year. Unlike other parts of the media world suffering through a pandemic-induced downturn, YouTube has been a major draw for people stuck at home, sitting out lockdown boredom.

The major stars continue to cater to the young—or at least those with a youthful sense of humor. According to research firm Statista, 77% of U.S. internet users ages 15-25 tune into YouTube. The top earner was nine-year-old Ryan Kaji, who clambered atop first place for the third year in a row. He’s famous for so-called unboxing videos, in which he takes toys out of their packages and reviews them. The little guy now has a line of branded merchandise—toys, backpacks, toothpaste, more—at Target, Amazon and Walmart that did $200 million in sales last year, and a Nickelodeon series called Ryan’s Mystery Playdate. There’s fellow child star Nastya (No. 7), the only woman with the numbers to make the earnings-based list, and newcomer to the list Blippi (No. 8), a 32-year-old with a popular children’s educational channel where he sings about aquatic animals and visits children’s museums. Attracting a slightly older audience are make-up mogul Jeffree Star (No. 10) and comedian David Dobrik (No. 9), the list’s third newcomer.

Nearly all YouTubers earn the majority of their income from ad revenue generated from their YouTube videos, a number that is boosted when videos are family friendly, in English and longer than eight minutes. And while those ad rates did dip at the beginning of Covid-19, they quickly rebounded. Plus the YouTubers have gotten plenty of money from big brands such as Bass shops and Kroger, which each sponsored specific videos for Dude Perfect (No. 3) and Rhett and Link (No. 4), respectively.

All of these 21st century celebrities have branched out into the lucrative world of branded merchandise, too. Top creators like Dobrik, Donaldson and Markiplier (No. 5) can easily do $500,000 or more in monthly sales of tee-shirts, sweats and beanies—all perfect work-from-home wear. “In March, April, when people were stuck at home, there was more consumption of content and that collided with an e-commerce wave,” says Nikita Kopotun, the cofounder of Juniper, a custom merchandise shop for influencers.

In a commercial sense, times could not be better for these stars. But little Ryan sums it up for kids and grown-ups alike when he says: “I just can’t wait until we can go back outside.”

The Highest-Paid YouTube Stars Of 2020

#10 | Jeffree Star

Earnings: $15 million

Total Views (from June 2019 to June 2020): 600 million

Total Subscribers: 16.9 million

The beauty star has been caught up in controversy. Hisself-described past racist behaviorandallegations of sexual assault, which he denies, as well as a years-long feud with fellow YouTuber James Charles, have caused some business ramifications, including the decision by retailer Morpheto stop selling his line. Regardless, he still clocked more than half a billion views in our time period. Even more lucrative than his YouTube channel, though, is his makeup line, which he sells direct-to-consumer. One of his most recent collections, Blood Money, features $52 eyeshadows and $18 lip balms, and his popular Conspiracy Collection, launched last year,reportedlysold 1 million eyeshadow palettes in 30 minutes.

#9 | David Dobrik

Earnings: $15.5 million

Views: 2.7 billion

Subscribers: 18 million

Over the past few years, Dobrik, 24, has done just about anything to make his audience laugh. He has driven a convertible through a car wash, shaved someone’s entire body and even once surprised his best friend by marrying his mom. (She was in on the joke—they divorced, amicably, after a month.) Lately, Dobrik has concentrated on porting his funny schtick over to TikTok. He’s been a hit there, too, accumulating 24.7 million followers. Brands dig Dobrik’s humor, and he’s won corporate sponsorships from SeatGeek, Bumble, EA and others. His devoted audience has led to a thriving apparel business (shirts, hoodies, shorts, pants), much of it sold under an amusingly self-aware brand name, Clickbait.

#8 | Blippi (Stevin John)

Earnings: $17 million

Views: 8.2 billion

Subscribers: 27.4 million

The only adult creating kids content on the list, the 32 year old launched his channel in 2014. He stars as Blippi, the brightly dressed, child-like character who educates through videos like “Blippi Visits the Aquarium” and “Learn Colors with Blippi.” Like Kaji, he has rolled out a full-scale merchandise line at big box retailers—child-size versions of his iconic orange glasses and blue-and-orange beret are top sellers—and offers his videos through Hulu and Amazon.

#7 | Nastya (Anastasia Radzinskaya)

Earnings: $18.5 million

Views: 39 billion

Subscribers: 190.6 million

The six-year-old Russian YouTuber goes by “Nastya” on her channel, which features the her and her father playing with legos, doing household chores and explaining viruses. The videos are colorful, expressive and don’t feature much advanced language, making them perfect for her global audience of tots. Since her debut on the list last year, Nastya has branched out: She’s become a popular kid on TikTok with 3 million followers and will launch her licensing program next year.

#6 | Preston Arsement

Earnings: $19 million

Views: 3.3 billion

Subscribers: 33.4 million

The pixelated world of Minecraft continues to be a goldmine for Arsement, 26. He rose to YouTube stardom off his videos exploring the animated cosmos and has since branched out to several other gaming-focused YouTube channels. On one, he plays Roblox. Another is called TBNRFrags—the acronym standing for “the best never rest,” the last word gaming slang for slaying an opponent. TBNRFrags features his exploits on the violence-filled military shooter Call of Duty. Arsement operates several lucrative Minecraft servers, where users pay to access Minecraft worlds he’s created and for in-game items; he runs another YouTube channel, PrestonCosmic, devoted to his time playing on his servers.

#5 | Markiplier (Mark Fischbach)

Earnings: $19.5 million

Views: 3.1 billion

Subscribers: 27.8 million

Markiplier has been at it on YouTube for eight years, posting ultra-popular breakdowns of video games. They’ve drawn in nearly 28 million subscribers, eager to pour over his new videos and vast archive—like, say, his 31-part series examining 2013’s Cry of Fear. Over the past year, Markiplier, 31, decided to change things up, and in addition to his existing YouTube channel, he and fellow gamer Ethan Nestor (aka CrankGameplays) founded a new channel, Unus Annus. On it, they featured funny, stunt-y vlogs. One time they tried on a bunch of Grinch costumes. In another, they had themselves pepper sprayed. Uniting the content was one central premise: They’d post a video every day for a year—then nuke the channel entirely, erasing all of its content, a comment about the fickle lifespan of internet popularity. Unus Annus was indeed popular, bringing in 4.5 million subscribers and nearly 1 billion views. When the time came to pull the plug last month, more than 1.5 million people tuned into a livestream as the duo bid goodbye, about roughly the same number who might ordinarily watch a primetime Sunday night baseball game on TV.

#4 | Rhett and Link

Earnings: $20 million

Views: 1.9 billion

Subscribers: 41.8 million

They’re some of YouTube’s longest-standing stars, having started “Good Mythical Morning,” their good-natured, nerdy talk show, back in 2012. Rhett (aka 43-year-old Rhett James McLaughlin) and Link (42-year-old Charles Lincoln Neal III) have recently added something else to their Mythical Entertainment Co.: In February 2019, they paid $10 million to acquire SMOSH, a sketch comedy YouTube channel. With that purchase, Mythical Entertainment, which now has 100 employees, did almost 2 billion views on YouTube in the past year, bringing in some $11 million in estimated revenue from YouTube’s ad-share program. “Good Mythical Morning” also has a thriving fan club with monthly dues ranging from $10 to $20 for access to exclusive content.

#3 | Dude Perfect

Earnings: $23 million

Views: 2.77 billion

Subscribers: 57.5 million

These five bros (Coby Cotton, Cory Cotton, Garret Hilbert, Cody Jones and Tyler Toney) have more fun playing with lightsabers, Nerf Guns and paintballs than most adults do. Their popular stunts have led to a national tour that grossed about $6 million and an accompanying documentary, Backstage Pass. In March, when the coronavirus first hit and professional sports were at a standstill, the group took to their YouTube channel to host the Quarantine Classic, competing against each other in three-point basketball shootouts and roller-chair hockey. The series of videos raised about $160,000 for the Red Cross and Feeding America.

#2 | Mr. Beast(Jimmy Donaldson)

Earnings: $24 million

Views: 3 billion

Subscribers: 47.8 million

Donaldson is YouTube’s biggest new star, good enough for almost 50 million subscribers—his ultimate goal: doubling that—and 3 billion views over the last year. His videos are a mix of stunts and humor: In the last 12 months, the dude has frozen himself in ice, gone around a Ferris wheel 1,000 times and constructed the largest Lego tower ever. Donaldson’s YouTube channel helps him market his merchandise line—he and the cast in his videos all don it—and is popular among brands such as Microsoft, Electronic Arts and Honey, the coupon app.

#1 | Ryan Kaji

Earnings: $29.5 million

Views: 12.2 billion

Subscribers: 41.7 million

The nine-year-old star is flying high—literally. This November he became the first YouTuber featured in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade with a float based on his superhero alter ego. It was a marketing ploy as much as it was a thrilling moment for the kids who tune into Kaji’s videos of DIY science experiments, family storytime and reviews of new toys. That’s just the start: The bulk of his business comes from licensing deals for more than 5,000 Ryan’s World products—everything from bedroom decor and action figures to masks and walkie talkies.

METHODOLOGY: All earnings estimates are from June 1, 2019, through June 1, 2020. Figures are pretax; fees for agents, managers and lawyers are not deducted. Earnings estimates are based on data from Captiv8, SocialBlade and Pollstar as well as interviews with industry insiders. For the list’s purposes, Forbes defines a YouTube Star as someone whose primary form of digital and media revenue comes from YouTube.

FAQs

Who earns the most money on YouTube 2022? ›

The highest-paid YouTuber going into 2022 is Jimmy Donaldson, who goes by the name of MrBeast. According to Forbes, he earned approximately USD$54 million in 2021 alone.

Who is the highest paid of YouTube? ›

Jimmy Donaldson, the 23-year-old American better known as MrBeast, was YouTube's highest-earning content creator in 2021, according to Forbes. His elaborate stunts have generated more than 10 billion views on the platform and earned him $54m (£39m).

How much is 100 million YouTube views worth? ›

How much did I make from 100 MILLION VIEWS on YouTube?

What is the most viewed video on YouTube? ›

On January 13, 2022, Baby Shark became the first (and currently only) video to surpass 10 billion views.

Who is the most famous person on YouTube 2022? ›

Who has most Subscribers on YouTube in 2022?
  1. PewDiePie. First on the list is Felix Kjellberg who has most subscribers on YouTube. ...
  2. HolaSoyGerman. ...
  3. Whinderssonnunes. ...
  4. Felipe Neto. ...
  5. Fernanfloo. ...
  6. ElrubiusOMG. ...
  7. Luisito Comunica. ...
  8. Luccas Neto – LUCCAS TOON.

How much money do you get from 1 million YouTube views? ›

Using Forbes's estimated pay rate of $5 per 1,000 views, a YouTube video with 1,000,000 views can make upward of $5,000, which makes being a modern-day influencer a pretty lucrative job!

Who is the best girl YouTuber? ›

Top 10 Female YouTubers in 2022 [Lastest]
  • Liza Koshy. 17.3M subscribers. ...
  • Rclbeauty101. 14.4M subscribers. ...
  • Lilly Singh. 14.6M subscribers. ...
  • Zoella. 10.8M subscribers. ...
  • Wengie. 13.7M subscribers. ...
  • Bethany Mota. 9.58M subscribers. ...
  • Lindsey Stirling. 13.4M subscribers. ...
  • Rosanna Pansino. 13.9M subscribers.
1 Sept 2022

Who is the #1 YouTuber? ›

The logo of T-Series, which is currently the most-subscribed channel on YouTube.

Who is the biggest YouTube influencer? ›

1) PewDiePie

He has resigned from YouTube for a while now, even if he's fought for this spot with other famous YouTubers, notably Smosh. Mainly a gaming influencer, he also likes to diversify into comedy sketches and Vlogs and even published a book recently. He has maintained its top position since the year 2021.

How much you get paid on TikTok? ›

As for the TikTok Creator Fund, you can earn between 2 and 4 cents for every 1,000 views. This means you might expect $20 to $40 after reaching a million views. Learn more about the TikTok Creator Fund here.

How much is 1 billion YouTube views worth? ›

A YouTube video with 1 billion views can make upwards of $5,000. According to a variety of sources, YouTubers can make anywhere from $0.01 to $0.30 per ad view with an average of $0.18 per view. The amount of money that YouTube pays in addition varies based on: The number of views your video receives.

Do YouTubers get paid monthly? ›

YouTubers are paid out monthly and either receive a check by mail or direct deposit. To start earning money from YouTube, creators must have at least 1,000 subscribers and 4,000 watch hours in the past year. Once they reach that threshold, they can apply for YouTube's Partner Program.

How much money is 200 million YouTube views? ›

How much YouTube paid me for 200 MILLION views in 2021

Who has a billion views on YouTube? ›

J Balvin and Justin Bieber are tied for the most billion views entries as a lead, featured artist or collaborator, with 11 official music videos each, Adele's “Hello” is the fastest entry into the Billion Views Club, reaching the milestone in just 88 days, and Guns N' Roses defy decades with the first billion-view ...

What is the most played song of all time? ›

It was never a hit single and got almost no play on Top 40 radio. There's even a dispute over the exact title. Yet “It's a Small World,” also known as “It's a Small, Small World” and “It's a Small World (After All),” is very likely the most played song in music history — nearly 50 million times.

What is the most disliked video on YouTube? ›

Revenge 😂

Who is the number 1 YouTuber 2022? ›

The Indian music video channel T-Series is the most-subscribed YouTube channel, with 225 million subscribers as of September 2022.

Who is the number one YouTuber in 2022? ›

1. PewDiePie. First on the list is Felix Kjellberg who has most subscribers on YouTube. You might know his channel with the name of PewDiePie.

Who's the most popular YouTuber 2022? ›

Who has most Subscribers on YouTube in 2022?
  1. PewDiePie. First on the list is Felix Kjellberg who has most subscribers on YouTube. ...
  2. HolaSoyGerman. ...
  3. Whinderssonnunes. ...
  4. Felipe Neto. ...
  5. Fernanfloo. ...
  6. ElrubiusOMG. ...
  7. Luisito Comunica. ...
  8. Luccas Neto – LUCCAS TOON.

What is YouTube's net worth 2022? ›

We estimate YouTube to be worth over US$180 billion in 2022, delivering Google a +110x return. YouTube as a standalone listed company would be amongst the largest video and entertainment companies in the world.

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