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List of most-subscribed YouTube channels

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American YouTube personality MrBeast is the most-subscribed channel on YouTube, with 333 million subscribers as of November 2024.

A subscriber to a channel on the American video-sharing platform YouTube is a user who has chosen to receive the channel's content by clicking on that channel's "Subscribe" button, and each user's subscription feed consists of videos published by channels to which the user is subscribed.[1] The ability for users to subscribe was introduced in October 2005.[2] YouTube began publishing a list of its most-subscribed channels in April 2006.[3] An early archive of the list dates to May 17, 2006.[4]

Since May 2006, when Smosh occupied the top position with just 2,986 subscribers,[4] at least 11 other YouTube channels have held the top spot; these include the channel for the American fictional web series lonelygirl15,[5] American comedian Brooke "Brookers" Brodack,[6] American fictional character Fred Figglehorn,[7] Swedish gamer Felix "PewDiePie" Kjellberg,[8] American comedian Ryan Higa,[9] American media personality Ray William Johnson,[10] American public speaker Judson Laipply,[11] English geriatric Peter Oakley,[12] and the official channels for Indian music record label T-Series, as well as YouTube[A] itself.[13]

The most-subscribed YouTube channel is MrBeast, having 333 million subscribers as of November 29, 2024, and gaining subscribers by an average of about 150,000 per day.[14][15][16]

50 most-subscribed channels

The following table lists the 50 most-subscribed YouTube channels,[B][17] as well as the primary language, country, and content category of each channel. The channels are ordered by number of subscribers. Those whose displayed subscriber counts are identical, are listed so that the channel whose current growth rate indicates that its displayed subscriber count will exceed that of the other channel is listed first. Automatically generated channels that lack their own videos, such as Music and News, and channels that have been made effectively obsolete as a result of the transferral of their content, such as JustinBieberVEVO and TaylorSwiftVEVO[C] are excluded.

As of October 2024, 22 of the 50 channels listed primarily produce content in English while 15 primarily produce content in Hindi. All 50 channels have surpassed 57 million subscribers.[18] Eleven of the channels have surpassed 100 million subscribers and only two have more than 200 million subscribers: MrBeast and T-Series. MrBeast is the only channel that has more than 300 million subscribers.[19]

  1. ^ TheSoul Publishing is currently based in Cyprus; it was originally based in Russia and is still Russian-owned.[28]

Historical progression of most-subscribed channels

The following table lists the 20 distinct runs as the most-subscribed YouTube channel recorded since May 2006. Only runs lasting at least 24 hours are included. Twelve different channels have held the position, with PewDiePie holding the title a record four times (and also holds the records for the longest time as the most subscribed channel (1,920 days in his third time), the shortest time as the most subscribed channel (four days in his second time), and the longest overall combined time as the most subscribed channel (2,017 days)). In second place is Smosh, which held it three times, while third place is tied between nigahiga, T-Series, and YouTube's own channel, which have all held it twice each. YouTube's own official channel, then known as "YouTube Spotlight", briefly held the title in late 2013; one factor that contributed to the channel's rise to the top spot was the site's autosuggestion for new users to subscribe to the channel upon registration.[29] Geriatric1927 had the shortest overall time as the most-subscribed YouTube Channel only holding the achievement for 28 days.

Overall of the twelve channels who have held the record, seven featured individual males, one (Brookers) featured an individual female, two (T-Series, YouTube Spotlight) were brand channels, one (Smosh) was a duo of males which later became a collective and production company, and one (lonelygirl15) was a webseries. Nine of the channels were based in the United States, one (geriatric1927) was based in England, one (T-Series) was based in India, and one (Pewdiepie) was based in Sweden.

  Former record for days held
  Current record for days held
Channel name Date achieved Days held Reference
Smosh (1) c.May 9, 2006 ~34 [4][30]
Judson Laipply c. June 12, 2006 ~21 [31][32][33]
Brookers c. July 3, 2006 ~43 [34][35][36]
geriatric1927 August 15, 2006 28 [37][38][39]
lonelygirl15 September 12, 2006 226 [40][41][42][43]
Smosh (2) April 26, 2007 517 [44][45]
nigahiga (1) September 24, 2008[46] 12 [47][48][failed verification]
FЯED October 6, 2008[49] 318 [48][failed verification][50]
nigahiga (2) August 20, 2009 675 [47][51][52]
Ray William Johnson June 26, 2011 564 [53][54][55]
Smosh (3) January 12, 2013 215 [44][56][57]
PewDiePie (1) August 15, 2013 79 [58][59]
YouTube Spotlight[A] (1) November 2, 2013 36 [29][60][61]
PewDiePie (2) December 8, 2013 4 [62][63]
YouTube Spotlight (2) December 12, 2013 11 [64][63]
PewDiePie (3) December 23, 2013 1,920 [65][66][67]
T-Series (1) March 27, 2019[D] 5 [71][73]
PewDiePie (4) April 1, 2019 13 [72][74][75]
T-Series (2) April 14, 2019 1,876 [76][77]
MrBeast June 2, 2024 180 [78]
As of October 2024 UTC

Timeline

Timeline of the most-subscribed YouTube channels (May 2006 – present)

MrBeastT-Series (company)YouTube (YouTube channel)PewDiePieRay William JohnsonFred FigglehornRyan Higa#Channelslonelygirl15Peter OakleyBrooke BrodackJudson LaipplySmosh

Milestones and reactions

Channel Subscriber milestone Date achieved Reference
Brookers 10,000 July 7, 2006 [79]
geriatric1927 20,000 August 18, 2006 [80]
lonelygirl15 50,000 October 13, 2006 [81]
Smosh 100,000 May 15, 2007 [82]
FЯED 1 million April 7, 2009 [83]
nigahiga 2 million March 13, 2010 [84]
RayWilliamJohnson 5 million November 15, 2011 [85]
Smosh 10 million May 25, 2013 [86]
PewDiePie 20 million January 9, 2014 [87]
50 million December 8, 2016 [88]
T-Series 100 million May 29, 2019 [89]
200 million November 30, 2021 [90]
MrBeast 300 million July 10, 2024 [91][92]

Following the third time that Smosh became the most-subscribed YouTube channel, Ray William Johnson collaborated with the duo.[93] A flurry of top YouTubers including Ryan Higa, Shane Dawson, Felix Kjellberg, Michael Buckley, Kassem Gharaibeh, the Fine Brothers, and Johnson himself, congratulated the duo shortly after they surpassed Johnson as the most-subscribed channel.[94]

PewDiePie vs T-Series

In mid-2018, the subscriber count of the Indian music video channel T-Series rapidly approached that of Swedish web comedian and Let's Player PewDiePie, who was the most-subscribed user on YouTube at the time.[95][96] As a result, fans of PewDiePie and T-Series, other YouTubers, and celebrities showed their support for both channels. During the competition, both channels gained a large number of subscribers at a rapid rate, and surpassed each other's subscriber count on multiple occasions in February, March, and April 2019.[68][69][70][72] T-Series eventually permanently surpassed PewDiePie, and on May 29, 2019, it became the first channel to reach 100 million subscribers.[89]

In 2024, when MrBeast surpassed T-Series, he tweeted that his fans had "avenged" PewDiePie.[78] In the lead-up to MrBeast's channel becoming the most-subscribed, T-Series issued a call for subscribers.[97] Meanwhile, MrBeast urged his fans to not see the competition between his channel and T-Series as "this country versus that country", while also warning against anyone becoming hateful.[98]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Although now simply called "YouTube", YouTube's official channel was named "YouTube Spotlight" in 2013.
  2. ^ The total number of channels listed may exceed 50 if a tie exists for the 50th-highest subscriber count.
  3. ^ These are not to be mistaken for the channels Justin Bieber and Taylor Swift, both of which are included.
  4. ^ T-Series surpassed PewDiePie in subscriber count on numerous occasions, each lasting fewer than 24 hours, from February to late March 2019.[68][69][70] The first incident to last at least 24 hours began on March 27 and ended on April 1.[71][72]

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