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List of most-followed Twitter accounts
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This list contains the top 50 accounts with the most followers on the social media platform X, formerly and commonly known as Twitter. Notable figures such as Elon Musk, Barack Obama, Cristiano Ronaldo, Donald Trump, Narendra Modi, Justin Bieber, Rihanna, and Katy Perry are at the top of the list, each with over 100 million followers. Katy Perry was the first person to surpass this milestone.[1] As of February 2025, only eight accounts have reached the 100 million mark, with Elon Musk being the only account to exceed 200 million followers.[2]

Most followed accounts

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The following table lists the top 50 most-followed accounts on X, with each total rounded down to the nearest hundred thousand, as well as a description of each account. Many accounts are inactive for months or years. [2][3]

Elon Musk is the owner of X (formerly Twitter) and the most-followed person on X.
Former U.S. President Barack Obama is the most-followed politician on X.
Portuguese footballer Cristiano Ronaldo is the most-followed sports personality on X.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is the most-followed Asian on X.
Canadian singer Justin Bieber is the most-followed musician on X.
Barbadian singer Rihanna is the most-followed woman on X.
Rank Username Owner Followers (millions) Description Brand account
1 @elonmusk Elon Musk 228.3 Businessman, owner of X/Twitter
2 @BarackObama Barack Obama 129.5 U.S. President (2009–2017)
3 @Cristiano Cristiano Ronaldo 114.7 Football player
4 @realDonaldTrump Donald Trump 110 U.S. President (2017–2021, 2025–present)
5 @narendramodi Narendra Modi 108.8 Prime Minister of India (2014–present)
6 @justinbieber Justin Bieber 106.6 Musician
7 @rihanna Rihanna 106.3 Musician
8 @katyperry Katy Perry 102.2 Musician
9 @taylorswift13 Taylor Swift 92.1 Musician
10 @NASA NASA 88.1 Space agency Yes
11 @ladygaga Lady Gaga 80.3 Musician and actress
12 @YouTube YouTube 77.7 Online video sharing platform Yes
13 @KimKardashian Kim Kardashian 73.7 Television personality
14 @TheEllenShow Ellen DeGeneres 71.3 Comedian and television host
15 @X X (formerly Twitter) 67.8 Operator of platform Yes
16 @imVkohli Virat Kohli 67.6 Cricket player
17 @BillGates Bill Gates 66.1 Businessman and philanthropist
18 @selenagomez Selena Gomez 64.1 Musician and actress
19 @CNN CNN 63.5 News channel Yes
20 @cnnbrk CNN Breaking News 63.5 News channel Yes
21 @neymarjr Neymar 63.2 Football player
22 @espn ESPN 59.2 Sports channel Yes
23 @PMOIndia PMO India 59.1 Office of the Prime Minister of India Yes
24 @jtimberlake Justin Timberlake 57.9 Musician and actor
25 @nytimes The New York Times 54.9 Newspaper Yes
26 @ChampionsLeague UEFA Champions League 53.9 Football league Yes
27 @realmadrid Real Madrid CF 52.4 Football club Yes
28 @KingJames LeBron James 52.3 Basketball player
29 @britneyspears Britney Spears 52.0 Musician
30 @shakira Shakira 51.6 Musician
31 @BBCBreaking BBC Breaking News 51.5 News channel Yes
32 @ddlovato Demi Lovato 50.4 Musician and actress
33 @FCBarcelona FC Barcelona 49.8 Football club Yes
34 @SrBachchan Amitabh Bachchan 48.5 Actor
35 @NBA NBA 48.2 Basketball league Yes
36 @BTS_twt BTS 48.2 Musicians
37 @jimmyfallon Jimmy Fallon 48.1 Comedian and television host
38 @akshaykumar Akshay Kumar 46.8 Actor
39 @premierleague Premier League 45.9 Football league Yes
40 @BeingSalmanKhan Salman Khan 45.4 Actor
41 @bts_bighit BTS 45.3 Musicians
42 @SportsCenter SportsCenter 44.9 Sports channel Yes
43 @MileyCyrus Miley Cyrus 44.8 Musician and actress
44 @iamsrk Shah Rukh Khan 43.7 Actor
45 @JLo Jennifer Lopez 42.6 Musician and actress
46 @BBCWorld BBC World News 42.1 News channel Yes
47 @BrunoMars Bruno Mars 41.1 Musician
48 @sachin_rt Sachin Tendulkar 40.6 Former cricket player
49 @Oprah Oprah Winfrey 39.8 Television personality
50 @NiallOfficial Niall Horan 38.5 Musician
† Inactive for over a month
As of October 2025


See also

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References

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Grokipedia

The list of most-followed Twitter accounts ranks profiles on the microblogging platform Twitter—rebranded as X in 2022—by the total number of followers each has accrued, serving as an indicator of online influence among users worldwide. These counts, derived directly from the platform's metrics, encompass verified and unverified users but exclude suspended or deactivated accounts, though debates persist over the inclusion of bots and inactive profiles that inflate apparent popularity. As of October 2025, Elon Musk's account leads with over 228 million followers, a figure that has grown substantially since his 2022 acquisition of the platform, reflecting his dual role as owner and prolific poster on topics ranging from technology to policy. Trailing him are former U.S. President Barack Obama with approximately 131 million followers and soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo with around 116 million, highlighting the dominance of political leaders, entertainers, and athletes in commanding mass audiences. The list underscores shifts in digital fame, with Musk's surge illustrating how platform ownership and controversial content can accelerate follower growth amid efforts to combat spam and enhance authenticity.

Platform Context

Background and Rebranding

Twitter originated as a side project at the podcasting company Odeo, founded on March 21, 2006, by Jack Dorsey, Noah Glass, Biz Stone, and Evan Williams. The platform publicly launched on July 15, 2006, enabling users to post short messages limited to 140 characters, which facilitated real-time sharing of news, opinions, and events. This microblogging format quickly positioned Twitter as a hub for public discourse, gaining traction during events like the 2007 South by Southwest festival and subsequent global occurrences such as elections and social movements. Elon Musk acquired Twitter on October 27, 2022, for $44 billion, assuming control and taking the company private to pursue reforms aimed at enhancing free speech and reducing perceived censorship. On July 24, 2023, the platform underwent a rebranding to X, replacing the longstanding bird logo with a minimalist "X" emblem as part of Musk's vision to evolve it into an "everything app" encompassing payments, messaging, and more, drawing inspiration from services like China's WeChat. The rebranding included the domain shift to x.com, though legacy Twitter references persisted in some contexts initially. These changes introduced a subscription-based verification system through X Premium, supplanting the prior legacy blue checkmarks granted to notable figures, which recalibrated perceptions of account legitimacy and encouraged paid subscriptions for enhanced visibility. Algorithmic updates post-acquisition, including the open-sourcing of the recommendation system in March 2023, shifted emphasis toward maximizing user engagement via relevance and interactions rather than strict reliance on follower numbers or timelines. By mid-2023, X reported exceeding 500 million monthly active users, underscoring platform growth amid relaxed content moderation and reinstated accounts, though independent verifications of metrics varied due to private ownership limiting public disclosures.

Evolution of Follower Metrics

In the early 2010s, Twitter's follower metrics centered on raw numerical tallies as primary indicators of influence, especially among celebrities whose counts were frequently highlighted in media rankings and brand valuations to reflect broad reach and cultural prominence. This approach treated follower numbers as a straightforward proxy for popularity, with minimal emphasis on qualitative factors like interaction quality, amid platform growth that saw daily tweets escalate from 35 million in 2010 to higher volumes by mid-decade. The platform's adoption of an algorithmic timeline in March 2016 marked a pivotal shift, prioritizing content based on engagement metrics such as retweets, likes, and replies over chronological order, which increased overall user interactions by exposing posts to broader audiences but de-emphasized sheer follower volume in favor of active participation rates. Post-2016 updates further refined this, amplifying emotionally resonant or timely content, leading analysts to value hybrid metrics combining followers with engagement ratios to better assess sustained influence amid concerns over passive audiences. Twitter introduced its blue verification badge in June 2009 to authenticate accounts of public interest, helping users differentiate genuine entities from impersonators and bolstering the perceived credibility of high-follower profiles. The badge's conversion to a subscription-based model under Twitter Blue in November 2022, requiring payment for eligibility, decoupled verification from editorial judgment, prompting debates on whether it now conflates financial resources with organic authority in follower-based rankings. Twitter's API restrictions, effective February 9, 2023, ended free access for third-party tools, curtailing independent data collection on follower fluctuations and hindering granular analysis of growth spikes linked to viral phenomena like major news cycles or cultural moments. These changes, implemented to monetize developer access, reduced transparency into real-time metrics, shifting reliance toward platform-reported figures while complicating causal attributions of rapid follower gains to event-driven virality.

Current Top Accounts

Leading Individual Accounts


As of October 2025, Elon Musk leads individual accounts on X (formerly Twitter) with 228 million followers, surpassing all others due to his role as the platform's owner since the October 2022 acquisition and emphasis on unrestricted discourse that has drawn substantial organic growth. This represents an increase of over 140 million followers since the acquisition, when his count stood below 100 million, reflecting heightened engagement from users seeking alternatives to perceived prior censorship. Former U.S. President Barack Obama follows with 130.1 million followers, a figure largely built during his 2009–2017 tenure but showing minimal growth since 2016 amid shifting platform dynamics.
In sports, Portuguese footballer Cristiano Ronaldo maintains 115.2 million followers, sustained by global fan loyalty and consistent on-field performance across clubs like Manchester United and Al-Nassr. U.S. President Donald Trump holds 110 million followers, with a notable resurgence following his 2024 election victory and return to the platform after a prior suspension, capitalizing on direct communication with supporters. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi commands 108.8 million followers, bolstered by active governance updates and national appeal, positioning him as the top non-Western leader.
RankAccount OwnerFollowers (millions)Primary Category
1Elon Musk228Business/Technology
2Barack Obama130.1Politics
3Cristiano Ronaldo115.2Sports
4Donald Trump110Politics
5Narendra Modi108.8Politics
These counts highlight a trend where accounts associated with conservative or populist figures, such as Musk, Trump, and Modi, have experienced accelerated growth post-2022 platform changes, contrasting with stagnation in legacy left-leaning profiles like Obama's, potentially linked to user migration toward less moderated environments. Empirical data from X's verification methods, including API audits, underpin these figures, though minor discrepancies arise from real-time fluctuations.

Prominent Organizational Accounts

Among non-individual entities, organizational accounts on X (formerly Twitter) typically command follower bases in the tens of millions, significantly trailing leading personal accounts that exceed 100 million, which underscores the platform's bias toward individual charisma over institutional messaging. As of October 2025, the highest-followed such account is @NASA with 88.1 million followers, driven by event-specific spikes around space missions like the Artemis program launches and Mars rover updates, yet constrained by its specialized focus on scientific and exploratory content appealing primarily to enthusiasts rather than broad demographics. This niche positioning contrasts with the universal draw of celebrities, limiting NASA's reach despite high-profile events that temporarily boost engagement. YouTube's @YouTube account follows closely at 78.4 million followers, functioning as a promotional channel for platform-wide announcements, algorithm highlights, and creator spotlights, with growth correlating to viral trends and policy changes rather than sustained organic loyalty. Media outlets exemplify fragmented audience capture, as @CNN sustains around 60 million followers primarily through breaking news alerts, though its institutional tone yields lower interaction rates compared to personal brands that foster direct audience rapport. Such accounts rarely surpass 100 million due to divided loyalties across competing entities and a reliance on programmatic advertising to amplify visibility beyond event-driven surges, as evidenced by sports leagues like the NBA, whose @NBA handle hovers below 50 million amid seasonal viewership peaks. This pattern reveals organizational influence's structural ceilings, where broad institutional mandates dilute the personalized appeal that propels individual accounts.
AccountFollowers (millions, Oct. 2025)Primary Focus
@NASA88.1Space exploration and science
@YouTube78.4Video platform updates
@CNN~60News broadcasting

Historical Development

Early Dominance by Entertainers

In the platform's formative years from 2009 to 2014, entertainers, particularly pop musicians, consistently occupied the top positions among most-followed Twitter accounts, propelled by dedicated youth demographics and viral marketing tied to music careers. Justin Bieber, whose account gained traction through early YouTube exposure and teen-oriented releases like his 2009 debut album My World 2.0, amassed over 31 million followers by late 2012, securing the overall lead amid competition from peers. This dominance reflected direct correlations with commercial successes, such as Bieber's concert tours and album sales exceeding 20 million units by 2012, which fueled fan engagement and organic shares on the platform. Katy Perry surpassed Bieber as the most-followed individual in November 2013, reaching the milestone of 50 million followers on January 31, 2014—the first account to do so—bolstered by hits from her Teenage Dream era and subsequent Prism promotions, which amplified virality through teaser posts and fan interactions. Contemporaries like Rihanna, with 33.9 million followers by early 2014, and Taylor Swift, at 38.8 million, similarly ranked high, their gains linked to album cycles—Rihanna's Loud (2010) and Swift's Red (2012)—and publicity from personal scandals or endorsements that drove real-time buzz without deeper ideological appeals. This era's trends underscored entertainment's primacy in early follower metrics, where rapid accrual stemmed from ephemeral fan loyalty rather than sustained institutional or political narratives; for instance, Bieber's "Belieber" base enabled bursts exceeding 1 million new followers annually pre-2013, mirroring tour attendance spikes but plateauing absent ongoing hits. Such patterns highlighted Twitter's initial role as a promotional amplifier for celebrity virality, distinct from later shifts toward broader discourse.

Political and Athletic Shifts

Barack Obama's Twitter account maintained a prominent position among the most-followed in 2016, reaching 77,004,056 followers by September 1, reflecting sustained public interest following his presidency. This figure placed him third overall behind entertainers Katy Perry and Justin Bieber, yet highlighted the appeal of political figures amid global attention to U.S. leadership transitions. Post-presidency, Obama's follower base stabilized around this level into early 2017, contrasting with the volatile gains seen in other political accounts during election cycles. Donald Trump's Twitter following surged during the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign, with daily percentage growth rates accelerating from June 2015 through December 2016, directly tied to campaign announcements, debates, and media coverage. This expansion exemplified how electoral events drove rapid audience accumulation for candidates, shifting relative influence toward political discourse on the platform. Similar patterns emerged in the 2020 election, where lawmaker and candidate accounts experienced dramatic posting and engagement increases, further elevating non-entertainer profiles amid heightened politicization. Athletes like Cristiano Ronaldo saw follower boosts linked to major sporting spectacles, such as the 2018 FIFA World Cup, where his hat-trick against Spain generated peak Twitter engagement and discussions. Entering the tournament with over 72.6 million followers, Ronaldo's performances amplified his visibility, contributing to subsequent growth that positioned athletic accounts as competitive alternatives to entertainers by the late 2010s. These spikes, driven by real-time event exposure rather than platform algorithms alone, underscored causal ties between global competitions and audience expansion for sports figures. Overall, from 2015 to 2022, such event-specific surges enabled political and athletic accounts to challenge entertainer dominance, as follower metrics increasingly reflected world events over organic celebrity appeal.

Post-Acquisition Changes

Following Elon Musk's acquisition of Twitter on October 27, 2022, his personal account experienced substantial follower growth, increasing from approximately 100 million to over 225 million by mid-2025, positioning it as the platform's most-followed account. This surge aligned with platform policy shifts, including reduced content moderation and de-emphasis on prior censorship practices that had disproportionately restricted conservative viewpoints, enabling broader visibility for right-leaning influencers and accounts. Empirical analyses indicate that influential conservative accounts exhibited accelerated follower gains post-acquisition, contrasting with stagnant or slower growth among liberal counterparts, suggesting a realignment toward users previously underserved by algorithmic suppression. Claims of artificial follower inflation for Musk and aligned accounts overlook the platform's bot and spam purges initiated under his ownership, which systematically reduced counts across major profiles, including Musk's own loss of 43,000 followers in a single 2024 sweep targeting manipulative activity. These efforts, such as the 2023 inactive account deletions and subsequent spam removals, disproportionately impacted legacy high-follower accounts with historically higher bot infiltration rates—often left-leaning figures like Barack Obama, estimated at up to 53% fake followers pre-purge—thus cleansing inflated metrics without net user exodus. Platform daily active users stabilized around 200 million by 2024, reflecting resilience amid these cleanups rather than decline-driven redistribution. The reinstatement of Donald Trump's account on November 19, 2022, following a user poll, facilitated his return to active posting by August 2023, contributing to follower expansion amid heightened political engagement. Right-slanting political accounts, such as those of Narendra Modi and Trump, demonstrated empirically higher growth rates in this period, with Modi's profile sustaining top-tier status through organic international appeal uncorrelated to prior moderation biases. These dynamics underscore a causal shift from pre-acquisition equilibria, where entertainer and establishment figures dominated, toward influence patterns reflecting user-driven preferences unhindered by institutional gatekeeping.

Measurement and Authenticity Issues

Counting and Verification Methods

Follower counts on X (formerly Twitter) are incremented each time a user opts in to follow an account by selecting the follow button, resulting in a direct tally of subscribing accounts without algorithmic adjustments for engagement or authenticity at the point of counting. This raw metric is publicly displayed on user profiles and accessible via the X API, which provides near-real-time updates through polling endpoints that reflect changes as they occur on the platform. Prior to policy changes in 2023, the platform did not automatically deduct inactive followers from tallies; dormant accounts remained in counts unless manually unfollowed, deleted, or subject to enforcement actions. In May 2023, X announced the removal of accounts inactive for several years, which indirectly refined follower metrics by purging non-contributing profiles from tallies, though this applied platform-wide rather than targeting specific inactivity thresholds in real-time counting. Verification status, indicated by blue checkmarks, historically relied on editorial review for notable accounts until November 2022, when X shifted to a subscription model via Twitter Blue (later X Premium) at $8 per month, granting checks to paying users meeting basic criteria like account age and activity. This change aimed to democratize verification but raised concerns over potential paid inflation of perceived influence, as subscribers gained algorithmic prioritization without mandatory proof of notability. For empirical assessment beyond platform-reported figures, third-party tools like SparkToro conduct audits by sampling followers and evaluating reachability, recent activity, and spam indicators, estimating proportions of active versus dormant or fake accounts through direct API queries and pattern analysis. These methods prioritize verifiable public data—such as last tweet timestamps and profile completeness—over opaque internal algorithms, providing independent benchmarks that highlight discrepancies between total counts and engaged audiences. Such audits underscore the value of cross-referencing official metrics with external validations to approximate true follower vitality, though they remain estimates limited by API access and sampling size.

Bot and Fake Account Prevalence

Estimates of inauthentic accounts on Twitter, including bots and fake profiles, have varied across studies, with a 2022 analysis by SparkToro and Followerwonk identifying 19.42% of active accounts (those posting within the prior 90 days) as fake or spam, based on a sample of over 44,000 profiles evaluated for low activity, repetitive behavior, and other indicators. This figure exceeds Twitter's own 2021 quarterly estimate of about 5% spam, highlighting methodological differences in detection, such as SparkToro's conservative thresholds that minimize false positives but may undercount sophisticated automation. Earlier assessments, including researcher predictions around 15% platform-wide bots in periods leading to 2018, underscore persistent challenges in quantifying automation amid evolving tactics. High-follower accounts, particularly those of politicized figures, often exhibit elevated rates of inauthentic follows, complicating claims of influence derived solely from raw metrics. For instance, a 2022 audit found 23.42% of Elon Musk's then-93 million followers to be fake or spam, surpassing the platform average through indicators like minimal engagement and profile anomalies. Such disparities arise from causal mechanisms like black-market purchases, where services like Devumi supplied over 200 million followers drawn from stockpiles of dormant or fabricated profiles, enabling rapid inflation without organic growth. These practices distort follower counts, as evidenced by 2018 reports of agencies spending thousands to acquire hundreds of thousands of followers overnight, prioritizing perceived popularity over genuine interaction. Inauthentic accounts disproportionately amplify politicized content, with studies detecting 8-14% bot involvement in interactions around high-stakes events like Musk's 2021 poll on reinstating Donald Trump, and elevated automation during pre-2022 elections such as the 2018 U.S. midterms. Bots have driven trends and misinformation, as in Brazilian contests where they boosted partisan narratives, potentially skewing perceived public sentiment and electoral dynamics without reflecting human consensus. While proponents note that coordinated amplification can raise awareness for underrepresented causes, the predominant effect undermines authenticity, fostering reliance on unverified metrics that overstate reach and bias algorithmic visibility toward manipulated narratives. This prevalence cautions against equating follower volume with true influence, as inauthentic follows erode the reliability of rankings and engagement proxies.

Platform Interventions and Purges

In May and June 2018, Twitter suspended over 70 million accounts identified as fake or spam, with the removal pace exceeding one million per day into July, as part of an effort to dismantle spam operations and enhance platform integrity. This purge targeted suspicious follower counts, resulting in sharp declines for prominent users; Barack Obama's @BarackObama account, for example, lost approximately 2.3 million followers, reducing its total from over 104 million. The action disrupted markets for purchased followers used to inflate influence, though it prompted investor concerns, contributing to a drop in Twitter's stock price amid fears of distorted user metrics. After Elon Musk's acquisition of Twitter (rebranded X) on October 27, 2022, the platform escalated anti-bot measures, driven by Musk's pre-purchase pledge to "defeat the spam bots or die trying" in response to estimated spam levels of 5-20% of accounts. Key interventions included temporary view rate limits imposed on July 1, 2023, limiting unauthenticated users to 600 daily post views and verified accounts to 6,000, explicitly to hinder data scraping by bots and AI trainers while facilitating detection. X also deployed AI for proactive spam identification, reporting routine purges of millions of automated accounts daily to curb fake growth and artificial engagement. These steps contrasted with prior passive approaches, yielding observable reductions in spam proliferation, though periodic system-wide purges have occasionally led to temporary follower drops for legitimate users. Critics of the purges, including some activist networks, have highlighted disruptions to built-up influence reliant on low-quality followers, arguing that aggressive removals undermine organic growth signals without sufficient appeals processes. Accusations of enforcement bias persist, with claims that pre-Musk Twitter tolerated bot amplification of certain ideological content—often aligned with left-leaning echo chambers—while post-acquisition efforts faced scrutiny for prioritizing technical authenticity over narrative preservation; right-leaning analysts contend this earlier laxity enabled manipulated consensus on platforms. Despite ongoing challenges, such as evolving AI-driven bots evading detection, the interventions underscore a shift toward verifiable user bases over inflated counts.

References