Real name
Adin David Ross. He has used his real name on stream throughout his career — there's no separate handle.
Quick-reference trivia about Adin Ross — birth, platform timeline, signature moments, and the numbers most people get wrong.
Adin David Ross. He has used his real name on stream throughout his career — there's no separate handle.
October 11, 2000. As of mid-2026, he is 25 years old.
Boca Raton, Florida, United States. He has cited Boca Raton repeatedly across origin-story segments.
American. His content is broadcast from the United States, primarily out of Los Angeles in recent years.
Kick. He signed with the platform in 2023 after a permanent Twitch ban, and the channel has been Kick-native since.
Permanently banned from Twitch in February 2023 after a series of suspensions. The move to Kick followed shortly after and reshaped the streamer-platform economy that year.
Public reporting around 2023–2024 framed a roughly $140M combined Kick offer involving Adin Ross alongside Kai Cenat and IShowSpeed. The figure is debated, but the scale of Kick's creator-recruitment spend is on public record.
On August 5, 2024, hosted former President Donald Trump live on Kick. The stream peaked above 580,000 concurrent viewers, making it Kick's largest English-language broadcast and generating over 100 million cross-platform views.
During the Trump stream, gifted Trump a custom-wrapped Tesla Cybertruck and a gold Rolex — gifts that publicly exceeded FEC individual-contribution limits and drew mainstream-press coverage.
"AYYYY!" — his drawn-out, high-pitched greeting and reaction shout. It's been a stream-opener and a chat-aimed reaction line since the early Twitch days.
Just-Chatting + e-date streams + celebrity-guest sit-downs. The channel does NBA 2K runs, but the guest-stream format is what defines the brand at scale.
Donald Trump, Andrew Tate, IShowSpeed, Kai Cenat, Drake (text), Snoop Dogg, multiple NBA players. The guest roster is among the broadest in streaming.
Long-running cross-stream partnerships with Speed and Kai Cenat. The three have appeared together in compilation-format streams and were grouped in the public 2023 Kick-deal narrative.
Stake-tagged content is a recurring sponsorship slot. The channel has also carried apparel, energy-drink, and crypto-adjacent partnerships across its run.
Frequently cited in creator-economy press as a "controversial" figure — multiple Twitch suspensions before the permanent ban, e-date format pushback, and politically-flavoured guest decisions. He has leaned into the framing on stream.
Long-time WWE fan. Has appeared at WWE Live events, referenced wrestling storylines across stream segments, and used wrestling-promo cadence in callouts.
Has an older sister, Naomi, who has appeared on his streams across the years. He has spoken on stream about being close with his family.
Public estimates place him in the $24M–$30M range, driven by the Kick contract, sponsorships, and event work. See our breakdown.
Kick contract is the largest single line item in 2024–2026, followed by sponsorships (Stake and adjacent partners), event appearances, and YouTube AdSense from clip channels.
"Chat" — Adin Ross talks to chat as a singular entity in nearly every stream. There's no formal fanbase name; "Adin Army" appears informally in community posts but isn't an official designation.
All figures are public estimates and best-effort reconstructions. If you spot anything that's clearly wrong, please let us know.