Stokes Twins
Alan Chen Stokes and Alex Chen Stokes, commonly known as the Stokes Twins, are American twins and influencers known for their YouTube and TikTok accounts. They began making videos separately and then combined their following into a shared twins account.
In Forbes’ 2025 Top Creators list the Stokes Twins ranked #19, with the magazine estimating their 12-month earnings at roughly $20 million. They were also named to the 2025 TIME100 Creators list, which profiles the 100 most influential figures on the internet.
Early life and education
Alan and Alex were born in Shenyang and spent their childhood between Liaoning and Knoxville, Tennessee. They have described their maternal grandfather—who helped raise them during summers in China—as a major influence on their work ethic and philanthropic outlook.The brothers enrolled in pre-medical studies at a California community college but left in 2016 to pursue social media full-time. For roughly eighteen months they lived in their car, showered at public gyms, and uploaded 6-second sketches to Instagram before pivoting to YouTube.
Career
Channel launch and early growth (2017–2020)
The twins created their joint channel on March 11, 2017, and reached four million subscribers within two years by mixing prank skits with dance trends popular on Musical.ly.Monetisation setback and reinvestment (2021–2023)
YouTube suspended monetisation for six months in 2021 following a prank that resulted in misdemeanor charges. After revenues were restored the twins began reinvesting “roughly US$10 million a year” in elaborate set builds, dubbing their videos into eight languages, and hiring VFX-specialist editors. A 2022 upload entitled ‘‘I Spent $1,000,000 in 24 Hours’’ surpassed 100 million views.Global breakout (2024–present)
Multi-language dubbing along with a greater focus on YouTube Shorts led to a sharp spike in 2024: average daily views rose from 3–5 million to about 50 million, and the channel passed 100 million subscribers that November.Content and style
Producer and photographer Jordan Matter calls the twins “masters of hybridising trends,” noting their habit of combining two or more popular formats—such as hidden-room builds and large-scale hide-and-seek—in a single video.Episodes are tightly storyboarded and shot by a lean in-house crew plus freelance set builders.