Charli D'Amelio

Charli D'Amelio
D'Amelio in 2020
Born
Charli Grace D'Amelio

(2004-05-01) May 1, 2004 (age 20)
Occupations
  • Influencer
  • dancer
Years active2019–present
Relatives
TikTok information
Page
Followers155 million
Likes11.7 billion
YouTube information
Channel
Years active2019–present
GenreVlog
Subscribers9.19 million[1]
Total views368 million[1]
100,000 subscribers2019
1,000,000 subscribers2020

Last updated: June 29, 2024
Websitecharlidamelio.com

Charli Grace D'Amelio (/dəˈmɪli/ də-MIL-ee-oh;[2] born May 1, 2004) is an American social media personality. She was a competitive dancer for over a decade before starting her social media career in 2019, when she began posting dance videos on the video-sharing platform TikTok. She quickly amassed a large following and subsequently became the most-followed creator on the platform in March 2020 until she was surpassed by Khaby Lame in June 2022. With over 155 million followers, she is the second most-followed person on TikTok, as of 2024.

D'Amelio made her feature film debut with a voice role in the 2020 animated film StarDog and TurboCat. She starred in the Hulu reality series The D'Amelio Show (2021–present) with her family and co-led the Snap Original reality show Charli vs. Dixie (2021–2022), with her sister. In 2022, D'Amelio won the thirty-first season of the dance competition series Dancing with the Stars alongside Mark Ballas.

Her other endeavours include two books, a podcast, a nail polish collection, a mattress, a makeup line, a clothing line, and a multi-product company. She was the first person to surpass both 50 million and 100 million followers on TikTok. D'Amelio was the highest-earning TikTok female personality in 2019 and the highest-earning personality on the app in 2022, according to Forbes, and is often described as TikTok's biggest star.[3][4][5]

  1. ^ a b "About charli d'amelio". YouTube.
  2. ^ D'Amelio, Charli; D'Amelio, Dixie. Charli & Dixie D'Amelio Answer the Web's Most Searched Questions. WIRED. Retrieved December 23, 2022.
  3. ^ Rosen, Samantha (October 21, 2020). "All About the Finance App for Teens That TikTok's Biggest Star Is Promoting". Time. Archived from the original on November 20, 2020. Retrieved November 18, 2020.
  4. ^ Cite error: The named reference scmptriller was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  5. ^ "Biggest social media accounts, by platform". Axios. Archived from the original on November 29, 2021. Retrieved November 29, 2021.