Monitored Kick channels ranked by paying subscribers and lined up against their recent average viewers. A subscriber is a recurring charge — harder to fake. Concurrent viewers are not. When a channel pulls a crowd off almost no subs, you’re usually looking at bought traffic. We lead with the channels live right now — flip Show offline for the full board — and sorting the V / Sub column brings the outliers to the top.
How to read it
Subs is the active, paying subscriber count. Avg viewers is the mean concurrent viewers across the channel’s most recent session (“—” when we have no recent live samples). V / Subdivides the two: a legit audience converts to subs at some rate, so a very high ratio means a lot of viewers no one is paying to support. We colour high ratios but never stamp a verdict here — open a channel’s dossier for the full engagement audit. Cross-reference with the exposed streamers database.
One caveat: subscriber counts aren’t entirely tamper-proof. A handful of channels do run sub-bot farms to pad the figure that’s usually trusted. It’s rare on Kick — only a small number of channels have been caught doing it so far — but it’s worth keeping in mind: an inflated sub count can mask a high V / Sub ratio, so read both numbers together rather than trusting either alone.
Source · Kick API
Every subscriber and viewer figure on this page is pulled directly from Kick’s official API and published unaltered— no weighting, no estimates, no editorialising of the raw numbers. Anyone can independently cross-reference the same figures against the public channel endpoints documented in the Kick API docs.
Sampled Thu, 25 Jun 2026 14:51:03 GMT · refreshes every 10 min