Nick Fuentes, a 27-year-old far-right influencer, has built a lucrative financial engine by exploiting his radical ideology, raking in nearly $900,000 in ‘superchats’ from over 11,000 donors since early 2025. Fuentes, who has been banned from mainstream social networks due to his extreme bigotry, has cultivated a die-hard audience eager to insulate him from the financial consequences of his rhetoric.
According to a Washington Post analysis of more than 1,400 hours of his streams, Fuentes’ revenue highlights a growing crisis within the American right-wing. His broadcasts on Rumble, an alternative platform where his videos have been viewed over 100 million times, promote a ‘Heart Culture’ of belonging, selling swastika-imprinted T-shirts and $100-a-month subscriptions to private chatrooms.
How Fuentes’ Business Model Works
Fuentes’ business model relies on a concentrated group of donors, with just 10 accounts responsible for $77,000, while the top 500 accounts provided nearly half of his total superchat income – more than $400,000. This ‘shadow economy’ of loyalists treats donations as a form of participatory politics, allowing Fuentes to reap massive rewards from online outrage.
Donor Motivations
For donors like Kristine Kasubienski, a 57-year-old Air Force veteran, the money wasn’t about hatred, but about supporting someone who ‘said everything I really feel, but try not to say out loud.’ Kasubienski, who frequently sent Fuentes digital gift payments, viewed him as a ‘second son,’ despite struggling financially herself.
Experts like Megan Squire, a researcher at the Southern Poverty Law Center, compare donating a superchat to ‘showing up to a Ku Klux Klan meeting,’ providing ‘keyboard warriors’ with a sense of status. Fuentes himself is unapologetic about his wealth, dismissing the investigation as ‘pocket change’ in text messages to reporters.
Here are some key statistics about Fuentes’ radicalisation empire:
- 11,000 donors have sent Fuentes nearly $900,000 in superchats since early 2025
- 10 accounts are responsible for $77,000 of his superchat income
- The top 500 accounts provided nearly half of his total superchat income – more than $400,000
- Fuentes’ videos have been viewed over 100 million times on Rumble
As the American right-wing grapples with the implications of Fuentes’ radicalisation empire, it remains to be seen how his influence will be addressed. One thing is certain, however: Fuentes’ business model has proven to be a lucrative and effective way to spread his ideology, with devastating consequences for those who oppose him.