Streaming star Adin Ross showed off his eye-popping earnings from broadcasting on Kick throughout April — but it was only half of what he could have made that month.
Adin Ross is one of the most popular streamers on the net, best known for his fiery split from Twitch in 2023 and his subsequent backing of Kick as a competitor platform.
Since then, he’s been unbanned from Twitch but has continued to stream full-time on Kick, where he’s been making quite the bag for himself.
Ross flexed on his friends and viewers during a May 12 broadcast, deciding to share how much money he made throughout the month of April.
Adin Ross is making $500K per month from streaming alone
As shown by his Kick metrics, Ross earned a whopping $493,727.67 — nearly $500K. However, he quickly explained that he could have made twice that amount if he had actually streamed every day that month.
In April, Ross only streamed 16 times, meaning that he could have potentially doubled his income. That’s not all; his $493K monthly revenue didn’t include subscriptions from viewers or money from his sponsorships.
After being prodded to share the full amount by fellow streamer and music artist DDG, Ross declined to answer, jokingly asking him if he was a federal agent coming to audit his bank account.
This isn’t the first time Ross has been open about his earnings with fans. Earlier in April, Ross showed that he’d made $150K over the course of seven streams.
Multiplying that by four, Ross said that he could make over half a million dollars per month — not including subscriptions or other sponsorships.
His total April income, revealed in May, tracks with this statement, and it’s just part of his plan to bring other streamers — and even viewers — over to Kick.
In late April, Ross revealed that Kick will be paying clippers to create clips from streamers’ broadcasts for things like YouTube videos, compilations and highlight reels, meaning that streamers won’t have to pay anything themselves.
““If you get clip sh*t for streamers on Kick, you’re going to get paid double pretty much. My clippers this month made, what, 100k? If you’re a streamer on Kick and you pay clippers, it’s going to get paid for,” Ross said.
Ross is just the latest big streamer to be transparent about his income. Other top influencers have also not been shy about sharing their revenue, such as Myth, who revealed YouTube had paid him $4M for an exclusive streaming contract.
And in 2023, xQc famously inked a $100M non-exclusive deal with Kick, while Dr Disrespect revealed he’d penned a $25M contract to stream on Rumble in late 2024.
Content shared from www.dexerto.com.