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Net Worth πŸ‡ΏπŸ‡¦ South Africa YouTube & Content
Updated May 2026

Richest YouTubers in South Africa 2026:
The Complete Top 10 Rankings

Richest: Ryan HD (~$10M) | Magic Giant: Wian (~$5M) | Fitness King: Noel Deyzel (~$3.5M)
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Thabo Mokoena
Β· 9 May 2026 Β· 18 min read Β· 6.2k likes
South Africa’s Richest YouTubers Summary β€” 2026
Top 10 YouTube Creators
South African Rand & USD β€” Social Blade, HypeAuditor, The Citizen SA, SocialMelo & Joburg ETC, May 2026
Subscriber range: 400K – 10.8M+ | Revenue: AdSense, brand deals, merchandise & YouTube memberships
Researched & fact-checked May 2026 β€” Social Blade, HypeAuditor, The Citizen SA, SocialMelo & Joburg ETC
Richest SA YouTuber
Ryan HD (~$10M)
Most Subscribed SA Channel
Ryan HD (10.8M+ subscribers)
Top Content Niches
Comedy, magic, fitness & lifestyle
Global Breakout Creator
Wian β€” magic content crossing 7.3B+ lifetime views

Overview: South African YouTube Wealth in 2026

South Africa’s YouTube economy has transformed dramatically over the past decade. In 2026, the creators building real, documented wealth from the platform are those who treat YouTube as their primary business β€” comedy skit makers, magicians, fitness educators, lifestyle vloggers, talk show hosts, and beauty creators who have built their subscriber bases and income streams specifically through YouTube content. This list covers creators whose primary fame and primary income flows from YouTube itself, measured by subscribers, views, AdSense revenue, and total estimated net worth.

What the 2026 data reveals is a South African YouTube landscape dominated by a handful of creators with genuinely massive global audiences. Ryan HD β€” South Africa’s most subscribed active YouTuber with over 10.8 million subscribers β€” leads a cohort that includes magic sensation Wian (nearly 7 million subscribers and over 7.3 billion lifetime views), fitness powerhouse Noel Deyzel (over 4.8 million subscribers), and global comedy icon Caspar Lee. These creators are not just big by South African standards β€” they have built audiences and income streams that compete internationally. Alongside them, a strong domestic tier β€” MacG, Lasizwe Dambuza, Mihlali Ndamase, Tshepi Vundla, Ghost Hlubi, and Slik Talk β€” has built the country’s most loyal local creator audiences.

“YouTube AdSense alone rarely makes South African creators wealthy β€” CPM rates in the domestic market are significantly lower than the US, UK, or Australia. The creators on this list who have built real net worth have either cultivated global audiences that attract high-CPM ad spend, or built diversified income streams around their YouTube platform: brand deals, merchandise, supplements, alcohol brands, and YouTube memberships.”

A note on methodology: YouTube earnings and net worth figures are never publicly disclosed by creators and all estimates in this article should be read as informed approximations. Data is drawn from Social Blade, HypeAuditor, The Citizen SA, SocialMelo, Joburg ETC, and credible South African media industry reporting. Net worth figures factor in AdSense revenue ranges, known brand deal rates in the South African market, merchandise and product income, and where known, business investments. Creators who are primarily musicians or television personalities β€” whose YouTube channels are secondary to their primary career β€” have been excluded. For more South African creator profiles, visit our Influencers category page.

Full Rankings: Top 10 Richest South African YouTubers (May 2026)

The table below ranks South African-born or South Africa-based YouTubers by estimated net worth as of May 2026. Only creators whose primary income and fame derive from YouTube content are included. Subscriber counts are approximate as of publication date.

RankCreatorEst. Net WorthSubscribers (approx.)
#1Ryan HD (Ryan Lombard)~$10M (β‰ˆR185M)10.8M+ (comedy skits)
#2Caspar Lee~$8M (β‰ˆR148M)6.5M+ (comedy/vlogging)
#3Wian (Wian van den Berg)~$5M (β‰ˆR92M)7M+ (magic/entertainment)
#4Noel Deyzel~$3.5M (β‰ˆR65M)4.8M+ (fitness)
#5MacG (Macgyver Mukwevho)~$1M (β‰ˆR18.5M)1.5M+ (talk show/podcast)
#6Lasizwe Dambuza~$800K (β‰ˆR14.8M)1.08M+ (comedy)
#7Mihlali Ndamase~$1M (β‰ˆR18M)400K+ (beauty/lifestyle)
#8Tshepi Vundla~$800K (β‰ˆR14.8M)900K+ (lifestyle/beauty)
#9Ghost Hlubi~$600K (β‰ˆR11M)900K+ (pranks/comedy)
#10Slik Talk~$500K (β‰ˆR9.2M)1M+ (commentary)
$10M
Estimated net worth of Ryan HD β€” South Africa’s wealthiest active YouTuber and the country’s most subscribed creator with over 10.8 million subscribers.
Ryan Lombard built a comedy content empire from South Africa that generates over R988,000 per month in YouTube ad revenue alone β€” before merchandise, brand deals, and other income streams are counted.

#1 Ryan HD (Ryan Lombard) β€” SA’s Biggest Comedy YouTuber (~$10M)

Ryan Lombard, born on 1 February 1998 in Gordon’s Bay, Cape Town, and known online as Ryan HD, is South Africa’s most subscribed YouTuber and the country’s wealthiest active creator on the platform. With over 10.8 million subscribers and more than 8.9 billion lifetime video views as of May 2026 (HypeAuditor), his channel has grown into one of the most significant content operations to emerge from the African continent. His estimated net worth of approximately $10 million (β‰ˆ R185 million) is built almost entirely through YouTube β€” making him the clearest example of a creator whose wealth is directly and primarily YouTube-derived.

Ryan HD launched his channel in April 2019 and grew at a remarkable pace by producing relatable comedy skit content β€” short-form videos centred on school life, family dynamics, and everyday South African situations that resonate with a broad global youth audience. His content is not gaming-focused; it is character-driven situational comedy that travels exceptionally well across language and cultural boundaries, which explains his ability to attract viewers far beyond South Africa. His monthly YouTube ad revenue alone is estimated at over R988,000 (approximately $54,400) based on Social Blade analytics and reporting by The Citizen SA, translating to over R11.8 million per year from AdSense before any brand deals or merchandise income is counted.

The key to his earning power is that his audience is genuinely global β€” his comedy content transcends geography, meaning his CPM rates are substantially higher than creators targeting a purely South African domestic audience. Beyond AdSense, Ryan HD earns through brand partnership deals, merchandise, and a high-volume content strategy that keeps his channel consistently among the top performers in the South African YouTube ecosystem. His channel is ranked first not only in net worth but in active monthly earnings by every major YouTube analytics platform tracking South African creators. More South African digital creator profiles are available in our Influencers category.

#2 Caspar Lee β€” SA’s Global Comedy Legend (~$8M)

Born on 24 April 1994 in London to South African parents, Caspar Richard George Lee grew up in Knysna and Durban, South Africa, attending Crawford College, La Lucia, before relocating to London in 2013. He is the most globally recognised YouTuber to emerge from South Africa, and his estimated net worth of approximately $8 million (β‰ˆ R148 million) reflects a career that began with a bedroom YouTube channel started as a teenager and grew into one of the most watched comedy channels of YouTube’s golden era. Multiple sources including Networthspot place estimates higher, though credible industry figures cluster in the $5–12 million range depending on methodology.

Caspar started his YouTube channel β€” originally named ‘dicasp’ β€” in November 2011, uploading from South Africa before relocating to London where his career exploded. His channel accumulated over 6.5 million subscribers and hundreds of millions of views β€” built on comedy sketches, pranks, challenge videos, and high-energy lifestyle content that resonated with a global youth audience during YouTube’s most commercially vibrant years (2013–2018). He became closely associated with fellow YouTube star Joe Sugg, and their collaboration-driven content was among the most watched on the platform during that period. Caspar starred in the comedy film Laid in America (2016) alongside KSI, and also appeared in Spud 3: Learning to Fly (2014). He was featured in Forbes 30 Under 30 in 2020 for his work in media and advertising, and married model Ambar Driscoll in 2025.

In August 2017, Caspar was named Chief Vision Officer of Influencer Ltd β€” a creator-brand matching agency that has become a significant business in its own right. He has also co-founded ventures including Margravine Management, Proper Living, and Creator Ventures. His YouTube output has significantly reduced since his peak years, with the channel now earning primarily from its archived video catalogue. His career illustrates the enormous wealth gap that exists between creators who built global audiences in high-CPM Western markets and those working within the domestic South African advertising ecosystem. Full influencer profiles are available on our Influencers category page.

#3 Wian (Wian van den Berg) β€” The Viral SA Magician (~$5M)

Wian van den Berg, known simply as Wian, is one of South Africa’s most remarkable YouTube success stories β€” a magician whose illusion-based content has achieved something very few South African creators have managed: genuine, massive, international viral scale. His estimated net worth of approximately $5 million (β‰ˆ R92 million) is built on a YouTube channel that has accumulated nearly 7 million subscribers and an extraordinary 7.3 billion lifetime views β€” one of the highest view counts of any South African-origin YouTuber on the platform. His monthly YouTube earnings are estimated at approximately R684,500 ($37,700) based on Social Blade data and reporting by The Citizen SA, translating to over R8.2 million annually from AdSense alone.

Wian was born and raised in South Africa and first came to national attention as a finalist on South Africa’s Got Talent in 2015. He was first introduced to magic after seeing a trick performed on the Ellen DeGeneres show, and subsequently studied from world-class magicians across multiple countries before building his YouTube presence around short, shareable magic illusion videos. This content format travels exceptionally well across language and cultural boundaries, enabling him to attract viewers from over 150 countries. Magic content commands premium CPM rates because it attracts diverse, globally distributed audiences that international advertisers value highly.

Beyond AdSense, Wian supplements his YouTube income with lucrative corporate event bookings β€” reportedly earning between R100,000 and R300,000 per corporate performance β€” as well as brand partnerships with major companies including Mercedes-Benz, Coca-Cola, and BMW. His cross-platform following totals over 20 million combined followers across YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram. He represents a category of creator that is still underrepresented in South African YouTube analysis: one whose content is niche in format but global in appeal, generating billions of views without ever needing to leave the country.

#4 Noel Deyzel β€” SA’s Fitness YouTube Giant (~$3.5M)

Born on 30 September 1984 in Paarl, Western Cape, Noel Deyzel is South Africa’s most successful fitness YouTuber. His estimated net worth of approximately $3.5 million (β‰ˆ R65 million) reflects a channel that has grown to over 4.8 million subscribers and accumulates tens of millions of views per month on the back of bodybuilding content, motivational messages, and an authentically direct approach to fitness culture that resonates with a global male audience. His channel launched in March 2008 but found its true breakthrough audience through short-form fitness content that exploded on TikTok before driving massive growth back to his YouTube presence. He completed his degree in Business Management at the University of Stellenbosch in 2006 before pursuing fitness full-time.

Noel’s content philosophy is distinct from most fitness creators: rather than producing polished, aspirational fitness content, he leans into authenticity β€” addressing mental health, breaking down toxic masculinity, and showing the unglamorous reality of competitive bodybuilding alongside genuine training advice. This combination has made him one of the more trusted voices in the global fitness creator space, with a cross-platform audience exceeding 20 million followers across YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram. His YouTube channel alone generates an estimated R250,000–R400,000 per month in AdSense revenue, with annual YouTube earnings estimated between $361,000 and higher by Social Blade data as of early 2025.

A significant portion of Noel’s income comes from supplement brand partnerships β€” most notably his collaboration with Ryse Supplements and Gorilla Mode, two of the most commercially active brands in the fitness supplement space. These deals are structured as long-term partnerships or co-ownership arrangements rather than simple one-off sponsorships, giving Noel ongoing income from product alignment in addition to promotional income. He is a South African creator who has built international wealth and audience reach without ever needing to relocate from his home country. More fitness and influencer profiles are available in our Influencers category.

#5 MacG (Macgyver Mukwevho) β€” Podcast and Chill Network (~$1M)

Macgyver Mukwevho, widely known as MacG, born on 6 November 1988, is the founder and host of South Africa’s most watched online talk show β€” Podcast and Chill with MacG β€” and the driving force behind the broader Podcast and Chill Network. His estimated net worth of approximately $1 million (β‰ˆ R18.5 million), based on multiple South African media reports, is built across a genuinely diverse range of income streams that all originate from the YouTube platform he built from nothing in 2018.

MacG launched Podcast and Chill in July 2018 after losing his radio position, beginning with nothing but an iPad and a vision. The show grew rapidly into a cultural phenomenon β€” known for its candid, unfiltered interviews with South African celebrities and public figures. His main YouTube channel has surpassed 1.5 million subscribers and accumulated over 400 million total video views, with average episodes running over 100 minutes β€” generating substantial watch time that YouTube rewards with higher AdSense payouts. Based on Social Blade data and reporting from multiple South African sources, the channel earns between approximately R200,000 and R322,000 per month from AdSense β€” roughly $11,000–$17,500 β€” translating to approximately R2.4 million–R3.9 million per year in ad revenue. MacG also monetises through YouTube channel memberships, where his loyal “Chiller” community pays monthly fees for exclusive content.

The Podcast and Chill Network extends beyond the flagship show to multiple productions, each generating their own audience and advertising income. Beyond content, MacG has built consumer brands tied directly to his YouTube audience: the Chiller Market merchandise line, alcohol brand Grandeur Gin, and beer-cider product Chillers Punch. His 2024 memoir Uncancellable: The Rise of MacG added a publishing revenue stream. MacG won the Podcaster of the Year award at the 2021 VN Global Media and Entertainment Awards β€” a landmark recognition for South Africa’s YouTube-first content industry.

#6 Lasizwe Dambuza β€” SA’s Comedy Content King (~$800K)

Born on 19 July 1998 in Soweto, Johannesburg, Thulasizwe Siphiwe Dambuza β€” known professionally as Lasizwe β€” is one of South Africa’s most prominent homegrown comedy content creators. His estimated net worth of approximately $800,000 (β‰ˆ R14.8 million), based on estimates from multiple South African sources including Nubia Magazine, is built on a combination of YouTube AdSense, brand partnership deals with major South African corporations, and media work that has elevated him from digital creator to mainstream celebrity.

Lasizwe’s YouTube channel has grown to over 1.08 million subscribers with over 136 million cumulative video views β€” earned through his signature comedy skit format of character-driven videos rooted in South African township culture and millennial social situations. He is also the creator and host of the YouTube series Awkward Dates, in which he goes on blind dates with various South African celebrities, and the YouTube game show Drink or Tell the Truth. He is the younger half-brother of actress and TV personality Khanyi Mbau. He broke new ground as the first African to helm a reality TV show on MTV Africa β€” Lasizwe: Fake It Till You Make It β€” which ran for three successful seasons. In June 2022, he was featured on the Forbes Africa 30 Under 30 list, which he dedicated to his late parents.

Lasizwe’s brand deal portfolio with major South African corporations β€” including Vodacom, Nedbank, Checkers, Nando’s, Fanta, and Audi β€” represents a significant portion of his income, given his cross-platform reach across YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram. More profiles like his are featured on our Influencers category page.

#7–#10: Mihlali Ndamase, Tshepi Vundla, Ghost Hlubi & Slik Talk

Mihlali Ndamase (~$1M) β€” SA’s Beauty YouTube Pioneer

Born on 29 November 1996 in Kokstad, KwaZulu-Natal, Mihlali Ndamase was among the first South African creators to build a sustainable professional career through beauty and makeup content on YouTube, and remains one of the most commercially influential beauty YouTubers the country has produced. Her estimated net worth ranges from $1 million to $2 million across various sources, with most credible estimates clustering around the $1 million mark based on her YouTube earnings, brand deal income, and business ventures. Her YouTube channel has over 400,000 subscribers and approximately 34 million cumulative video views β€” a subscriber count that has been built into a premium brand partnership portfolio commanding rates that reflect the quality and purchasing power of her audience rather than raw numbers alone.

Mihlali’s brand deals span major beauty partnerships with L’OrΓ©al Paris, MAC Cosmetics, Urban Decay, Neutrogena, Coca-Cola South Africa, DSTV, Netflix, and Jimmy Choo. She was certified as a professional makeup artist at LISOF (Leaders in the Science of Fashion) and studied Strategic Brand Communications at Vega School. She won the Cosmopolitan Magazine Influencer of the Year Award in 2019, and her audience β€” skewing female, 18–35, upwardly mobile β€” is one of the most commercially attractive demographics in South African digital media. More profiles are featured on our Influencers category page.

Tshepi Vundla (~$800K) β€” Lifestyle & Beauty Brand Power

Born on 12 December 1990 in Johannesburg, Tshepi Vundla is one of South Africa’s most polished lifestyle and beauty content creators β€” a YouTuber whose channel blends motherhood content, fashion, beauty tutorials, and aspirational lifestyle storytelling into a brand that resonates deeply with young South African women. Her estimated net worth of approximately $800,000 (β‰ˆ R14.8 million) is built on YouTube AdSense from her 900,000+ subscriber channel, a strong brand partnership portfolio, and her own product lines. She founded the personal shopping and wardrobe organising business Twelve12, won Woolworths’ Style by SA grand prize, and has partnered with brands including L’OrΓ©al, Clicks, Ponds, and Baby Dove. Her partner is rapper and musician JR (Tabure Thabo Bogopa Junior), with whom she has a son.

Ghost Hlubi (~$600K) β€” SA’s Prank & Comedy Rising Star

Ghost Hlubi (Khanya Hlubi) is one of South Africa’s fastest-rising YouTube creators, known for high-energy prank and comedy vlog content that has earned him over 900,000 subscribers. His estimated net worth of approximately $600,000 (β‰ˆ R11 million) is built primarily on AdSense income β€” with annual YouTube earnings estimated between R192,900 and R3,090,300 based on Social Blade data from February 2025 β€” alongside brand partnerships and sponsored integrations. He was identified by Favikon’s 2025 rankings as one of South Africa’s fastest-growing digital creators. His girlfriend Siyamthanda features regularly in his content, adding a relationship and lifestyle dimension to his prank-driven channel that has broadened his appeal beyond pure comedy.

Slik Talk (~$500K) β€” The Controversial Commentary Creator

Slik Talk β€” a South African creator who guards his real identity carefully, with his YouTube career beginning in May 2019 after being inspired by MacG β€” is one of the most consistently watched commentary creators in South Africa. His YouTube channel has crossed 1 million subscribers and is built on direct, often bluntly critical commentary on South African celebrities, influencers, and public figures. His estimated net worth of approximately $500,000 (β‰ˆ R9.2 million) is largely AdSense-driven β€” brands are generally unwilling to formally partner with a channel whose core content is criticism of public figures β€” but his view counts are consistently high enough that AdSense alone generates meaningful income. He gained significant public attention after boxing rapper Cassper Nyovest at the Fame vs Clout event in 2021. His channel demonstrates that controversy is a genuine content strategy: in the attention economy, polarising content generates view counts that translate directly into revenue.

How South African YouTubers Actually Make Their Money

The actual mechanics of how South African content creators build real wealth from YouTube are less understood than the surface-level story of “getting famous and earning from videos.” Here is how the money actually flows β€” and why some creators end up genuinely wealthy while others with similar subscriber counts struggle to generate sustainable income.

1. YouTube AdSense β€” The Foundation, Not the Ceiling. Every monetised YouTube channel earns AdSense revenue based on views and the CPM (Cost Per Mille) β€” the amount advertisers pay per 1,000 ad impressions. In South Africa, CPM rates for domestic audiences typically range between R18 and R54 per 1,000 views depending on content category, with finance and business content earning the most. However, creators like Ryan HD, Wian, and Noel Deyzel β€” who have built genuinely global audiences β€” earn in markets where CPMs range from $3 to $10+ per 1,000 views. This CPM gap is the single biggest driver of the wealth gap on this list: the top three earners all built international audiences, which is why their AdSense income vastly outstrips that of every other South African creator.

2. Brand Deals β€” Where SA-Based Creators Make Their Real Money. For creators whose audience is primarily domestic, brand partnerships are typically the largest income stream. A South African creator with 500,000 engaged subscribers can charge between R30,000 and R150,000 per sponsored integration, depending on their niche and audience quality. Creators with over 1 million subscribers in premium demographics β€” beauty, finance, lifestyle β€” can charge R250,000 or more per campaign. The major South African brand deal categories are telecommunications (Vodacom, MTN), banking (Capitec, Nedbank, Absa), FMCG (Checkers, KFC, Nando’s), and beauty (L’OrΓ©al, Clicks).

3. Merchandise, Product Brands & Digital Products. The creators who have most successfully monetised their audiences beyond advertising include MacG’s Chiller Market clothing line, his Grandeur Gin and Chillers Punch alcohol brands, Tshepi Vundla’s wardrobe organising business Twelve12, and Noel Deyzel’s long-term supplement partnerships with Ryse and Gorilla Mode. Digital products β€” fitness programmes, online coaching β€” are particularly attractive for South African creators because they carry zero logistics costs and can be sold globally.

4. YouTube Channel Memberships. A growing income stream for larger South African creators is YouTube’s built-in membership feature, where subscribers pay a monthly fee for exclusive content, badges, and emojis. MacG has activated this at meaningful scale through his “Chiller” community. For creators with deeply loyal fanbases, memberships can add tens of thousands of rands per month in guaranteed recurring revenue that is entirely independent of any individual video’s view count.

5. Supplement Co-Ownership and Equity Deals. Noel Deyzel’s model β€” where supplement brand partnerships are structured as long-term co-ownership or revenue-sharing arrangements rather than flat-fee sponsorships β€” represents one of the most sophisticated monetisation strategies on this list. By taking an equity or revenue-share stake in brands like Ryse Supplements, he earns ongoing income from product sales rather than one-time sponsorship payments. This model is growing in the South African fitness and wellness creator space.

“The South African creators who become genuinely wealthy from YouTube treat their channel as a business from day one. Building a media kit, understanding your audience demographics, pitching brand deals proactively, and diversifying into products, memberships, and equity deals is what separates the professionals who build lasting wealth from the passionate amateurs who plateau.”

For a broader look at South African digital creators and influencer wealth across all platforms, our Influencers category features individual net worth and earnings profiles across YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, and podcasting.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Ryan HD (Ryan Lombard) is the richest active South African YouTuber in 2026, with an estimated net worth of approximately $10 million (β‰ˆ R185 million). Born on 1 February 1998 in Gordon’s Bay, Cape Town, his comedy skit channel has over 10.8 million subscribers and generates over R988,000 per month in YouTube ad revenue alone β€” making him the highest-earning active creator on the platform from South Africa. Caspar Lee is the richest South African-born YouTuber in terms of total accumulated wealth (estimated $8M+), though he is now largely inactive on YouTube and focuses on his business ventures including Influencer Ltd. Among fully active, YouTube-primary creators, Ryan HD leads the list by both subscriber count and estimated monthly earnings.
Ryan HD is known for comedy skit videos β€” short-form content centred on relatable school life, family dynamics, and everyday South African situations. His videos feature character-driven humour involving teachers and students, family members, and social scenarios that resonate with a broad global youth audience. He is not a gaming creator. His content formula β€” relatable, fast-paced, culturally universal comedy β€” is what has enabled him to attract over 10.8 million subscribers and 8.9 billion lifetime views, with fans across South Africa, the United States, and beyond. He launched his channel in April 2019 and has been the most subscribed South African YouTuber since 2023.
Based on Social Blade analytics and reporting by The Citizen SA, Ryan HD earns at least R988,000 (approximately $54,400) per month in YouTube AdSense revenue, translating to over R11.8 million per year from ad revenue alone. His channel has accumulated over 8.9 billion lifetime views and consistently attracts massive monthly view counts. This makes him the highest AdSense earner among South African YouTubers β€” a position driven by the fact that his comedy audience is genuinely global, meaning he earns in high-CPM US and UK advertising markets rather than the lower-CPM South African domestic market. On top of AdSense, Ryan earns additional income from brand partnerships, merchandise, and other creator business streams.
MacG’s exact earnings are not publicly disclosed, but based on Social Blade data and South African media reporting, his YouTube channel generates between R200,000 and R322,000 per month from AdSense alone β€” approximately R2.4 million to R3.9 million per year in ad revenue. Beyond AdSense, MacG earns from YouTube channel memberships (where his “Chiller” community pays monthly subscription fees), brand sponsorships integrated into the show, his Chiller Market merchandise line, alcohol brands Grandeur Gin and Chillers Punch, live events, the broader Podcast and Chill Network’s multiple shows, and his 2024 memoir Uncancellable: The Rise of MacG. His total annual income from all sources is estimated to be well in excess of R5 million per year.
South African YouTube creators targeting a domestic audience typically earn between R18 and R54 per 1,000 views through AdSense (approximately $0.50–$3), depending on content category. Finance and business content earns the highest CPMs in the South African market; entertainment and comedy earns less but often compensates through higher view volumes. Creators like Ryan HD, Wian, and Noel Deyzel β€” whose audiences are genuinely global β€” earn in US and UK CPM markets where rates of $3 to $10+ per 1,000 views are common. This CPM gap is the single biggest driver of wealth inequality between the top three creators on this list and everyone else. The creators who build real wealth combine AdSense with brand deals, merchandise, and product businesses.
Wian (Wian van den Berg) is among the most viewed South African YouTubers by lifetime view count, with over 7.3 billion total video views across his magic and illusion content β€” one of the highest view counts of any South African-origin creator on the platform. His content is uniquely positioned to accumulate large view counts because magic and illusion videos transcend language and cultural barriers, attracting viewers from over 150 countries. While Ryan HD has a larger subscriber count (10.8M vs ~7M), Wian’s total lifetime view figure is exceptionally high due to the viral nature of his content format. His monthly earnings are estimated at approximately R684,500 from AdSense alone, making him one of the top earners on this list by YouTube-only income.
In South Africa in 2026, the most financially rewarding YouTube niche by total creator wealth is comedy and entertainment β€” as proven by Ryan HD’s dominance of the earnings charts with his school and family skit content. His globally appealing comedy format earns in high-CPM US and UK advertising markets, making AdSense income significantly higher per view than domestically-targeted content. For creators building within the South African market, personal finance and investing earns the highest domestic CPMs, followed by beauty and lifestyle (premium brand deal rates from FMCG and beauty brands), and fitness (global audience reach and lucrative supplement partnerships). Magic and entertainment content that can go internationally viral β€” like Wian’s β€” also demonstrates extraordinary earning potential when the content transcends language and geography.
South African YouTubers typically land brand deals through three main channels. First, direct outreach β€” the creator or their manager contacts brands directly with a media kit showing subscriber count, average views, audience demographics, and engagement rate. Second, influencer agencies and platforms β€” South African agencies like Webfluential, Nfinity, and The SA Creator connect brands with creators and take a commission on brokered deals. Third, inbound interest β€” once a creator reaches a certain size and visibility, brands begin approaching them directly. For South African creators, the most accessible entry point into brand deals is typically a local small or medium business in their content niche, with major national brands generally requiring 100,000+ engaged subscribers before seriously pursuing creator partnerships.
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