Blogging may not be the most cutting-edge digital medium these days – but even in this age of influencers and online video, the best blogs are still earning impressive revenues.
This article ranks the top 10 highest earning bloggers in 2026. We’ll take you through how much each blogger earns, before analysing some of the strategic factors which have helped each of these blogs to succeed.
Blogging may not be the most cutting-edge digital medium these days - but even in this age of influencers and online video, the best blogs are still earning impressive revenues.
While blogging remains a highly profitable venture, the era of transparent, public income reports from top earners has largely passed, making a definitive ranked list for 2026 challenging. This article moves beyond outdated figures to provide a realistic analysis of the world's most successful bloggers, using the latest available data, historical reports, and verified business metrics. We will explore who is still earning at the top, how their strategies have evolved, and what has changed in the landscape of blog monetisation.
At the turn of the year 2026, these ten names ranked among the highest-earning bloggers in the world:
Figures based on reporting from FounderJar.
Timothy Sykes, a penny stock trader turned teacher, exemplifies how a niche blog can become a massive revenue generator, though the widely cited figure of $1 million per month is an unverified third-party estimate.theawakenbuddha.com While no audited 2026 income is public, historical self-reported figures establish his success; in a 2013 interview, he quoted approximately $6.2 million in sales for the prior year.mixergy.com
The blog features a mix of penny stock news, evergreen stock trading guides, and calls-to-action urging visitors to sign up as a student of Sykes' stock trading courses. The CTAs are particularly crucial to the blog's monetisation.
Sykes has taken all sorts of opportunities to promote his personal brand, including coverage from CNN, Forbes and Fox Business.
Perhaps most notably, the stock trader has made multiple appearances as a charter yacht client on the Bravo reality TV show Below Deck. In one episode of the show, Sykes brings a group of students aboard the ship and sets up a stock trading office at sea. Whereas most of the charter guests who appear on Below Deck only make brief mentions of their professional lives, Sykes makes his work a dominant theme of the episode. He even gets his guests to wear branded t-shirts during the trip.
Not every blogger gets the opportunity to appear on a popular reality TV show, but there's a lesson for anyone looking to promote their blog in Sykes' approach: make the most of publicity opportunities by emphasising your core messaging.
Chiara Ferragni transformed her fashion blog, The Blonde Salad, into a global brand, but her story now includes a crucial lesson in brand vulnerability. Recent financial reports for her company, TBS Crew Srl, show a significant revenue decline to €1.3 million and a net loss of €2.28 million for 2024, a stark contrast to her peak earnings. This shift highlights how even the most successful digital empires must navigate controversy and adapt to changing market dynamics.
Ferragni launched The Blonde Salad as her personal fashion blog in 2009. Over the years, she grew the blog into a bilingual, international sensation. An interesting – and commercially important – feature of The Blonde Salad is a prominently integrated 'Talent Agency' page, which advertises Ferragni's stable of influencers, T.B.S. Crew.
The story of The Blonde Salad shows how a seemingly ordinary blog can rise to become one of the world's most successful. However, it also serves as a powerful reminder that brand reputation, once damaged, can have a direct and severe impact on revenue. For any blogger or creator, maintaining audience trust is not just a matter of principle - it's a commercial necessity.
Melyssa Griffin's blog is a prime example of turning expertise into a thriving e-learning business, though she stopped publishing public income reports after 2016. While the $238,000 monthly figure often cited is outdated, Forbes reported her business reached approximately $2.8 million in annual revenue by 2017, cementing her status as a top earner.
The blog features a wide array of specialist content, including blog articles, podcast episodes and testimonials. Much like our own website, targetinternet.com, Griffin's content attracts visitors with the aim of converting some leads into e-learning customers.
One of the most important sources of revenue for the Melyssa Griffin blog is its e-learning courses. While current pricing is not publicly listed, the sales model is built on the trust established through her free content.
Griffin's blog content doesn't necessarily promote these online courses directly: but what it does do, without fail, is demonstrate a level of subject knowledge that builds trust in her expertise. With topics ranging from business tips to personal and psychological advice, the blog gives readers a grounding in the basics of how to succeed as a blogger. The success of this public content in earning sign-ups to Griffin's online courses is key to the blog's high revenue.
Sarah Titus has built a digital product empire, and while third-party sites estimate her earnings around $200,000 per month, her last self-published figures are far more impressive. For 2021, she reported a staggering total blogging revenue of over $8.1 million, primarily from selling downloadable templates and printables on her Shopify store.
The family-focused lifestyle blog was founded by single mum Sarah Titus as a vehicle for sharing her tips on how to raise a family on a limited budget. The blog features content including resources for arts and crafts, articles about faith and household management, and recipes for easy meals.
Whereas the average lifestyle blog focuses on traditional blog articles, sarahtitus.com gives greater prominence to downloadable templates for arts, crafts and household organisation instead. These resources are offered either as free downloads or as subscriber benefits, providing incentives for users to visit and engage with the blog.
Giving away high-quality content for free doesn't always feel comfortable. After all, as a blogger, you've worked hard on creating and publishing that content. However, as Sarah Titus's multi-million dollar revenue proves, the marketing benefits of offering content for free can far outweigh the more immediate financial gain of paywalling your content.

Pat Flynn, a pioneer of income transparency, built his Smart Passive Income blog after being laid off from his architecture job in 2008, famously documenting his journey. Although he stopped publishing his detailed monthly income reports in December 2017, his legacy of building trust through transparency continues to fuel his business.
Today, his monetisation has evolved. Instead of selling individual courses for a one-off fee, his premium content is now accessed through a tiered community membership model, with prices ranging from a free 'Explore' tier up to a 'Thrive' tier at $149 per month.
One of the most interesting aspects of SPI is the members-only 'SPI Pro' section of the blog. The feature is promoted quite subtly, with a small login button in the navigation leading to a login area, and a banner which appears as the visitor scrolls the homepage.
It's a soft-sell approach, and we think that's smart, since the objective is to draw the audience's attention to an exclusive feature. Flynn's shift from selling individual products to a recurring revenue community model shows a savvy adaptation to market trends, focusing on long-term value and community building over one-time transactions.

Entrepreneurs On Fire is a business blog and podcast, run by founder John Lee Dumas. The site features a mix of business resources, interviews with notable entrepreneurs, and online courses covering topics such as strategy formulation and sales.
In an era of declining transparency, John Lee Dumas of Entrepreneurs On Fire stands out by continuing to publish detailed income reports. His most recent annual figures for 2024 show a gross income of $1,692,264 and a net income of $1,538,515, offering a rare, verifiable look into a top-tier blogging business.
The site features a mix of business resources, interviews with notable entrepreneurs, and online courses covering topics such as strategy formulation and sales.
Perhaps the most crucial success factor in blogging is giving the audience what they want. Entrepreneurs On Fire does a great job of clearly signalling to its audience that the blog is relevant to their interests. Ultimately, this is a website for people who are interested in becoming wealthy. It plays to that crowd by placing money front-and-centre, with regular, detailed reports on the blog's revenue and a monthly income ticker on the site navigation. These things tell the audience that the blog is all about making money, and that the blog owner knows how to do exactly that.
Heather Delaney Reese's family lifestyle blog, It's a Lovely Life, demonstrates how personal passion can be scaled into a high-earning business. While she no longer publishes income reports, with the last ones dating to 2019, her blog's historical success shows the power of making your life the core of your content.
The blog covers lifestyle topics including travel and shopping, plus educational content on blogging. Historically, the business generated "high six- to seven-figure" income through sponsored travel, courses, and partnerships.
For Heather Delaney Reese, it seems that blogging is a way of life. It's A Lovely Life follows the blogger's family closely, from their holidays to their home life. The family is photographed frequently and made the subject of the blog's content.
This level of personal exposure doesn't suit every blog, but for It's A Lovely Life, the strategy has proven highly successful in building a relatable brand that continues to attract a loyal audience.
Jeff Rose's personal finance blog, Good Financial Cents, is a masterclass in leveraging professional expertise through affiliate marketing. Although current income figures are not publicly available, the blog's structure provides a clear monetisation blueprint.
Covering topics ranging from investment and taxes to insurance and pensions, Good Financial Cents is an impressively comprehensive personal finance blog. The site was founded in 2008 by author and ex-soldier, Jeff Rose.
Many of the articles featured on Good Financial Cents are roundups of financial service providers, such as a guide to the "Best Car Insurance Companies". These articles feature outbound links to the third parties featured, and the links often include a referral code. So, when a visitor clicks through to the third party and makes a purchase, Good Financial Cents could be earning a commission.
Affiliate marketing is a classic monetisation tactic for blogs, and it's certainly one we'd recommend to anyone aiming to make a blog profitable.

Sisters Elsie Larson and Emma Chapman have grown A Beautiful Mess from a blog into a diversified media brand with multiple income streams. While they don't publish income reports, third-party analysis from 2022 estimated the business could make up to $5 million annually, a testament to their strategy.
The pair's blog, A Beautiful Mess, brings together content on crafts, decor, food, style and personal development. Their success, built on content, courses, apps, and product lines, underscores the power of brand diversification beyond the blog itself.
Pretty much every blog should have social media buttons linking out to its social media channels.
As a lifestyle blog with a strong social media following, A Beautiful Mess has paid close attention to this requirement. The blog's social buttons have been built very prominently into its website design, with coloured buttons in both the main navigation and in the footer.
The better the linkage between a blog and its social channels, the more effectively each can channel visitors to the other.
#10: Alborz Fallah ($125,000 per month)

Alborz Fallah's story shows that a passion-driven, special-interest blog can achieve immense success, culminating in a major media acquisition. He founded the automotive blog CarAdvice in 2006, which was later acquired by Nine Entertainment in 2016 and eventually merged into the Drive.com.au brand by 2021.
While his personal income isn't public, his journey from blogger to a key figure in a major media company's automotive portfolio proves that niche expertise can lead to extraordinary outcomes. Today, Drive.com.au operates with a staff of over 50 people from its headquarters in New South Wales.
If you've read all the way through this article, you may have noticed that a lot of the highest-earning blogs cover similar topics: especially entrepreneurship, family and personal finance.
However, the success of CarAdvice goes to show that there's opportunity for blogs covering special-interest topics to succeed. The blog's founder, Alborz Fallah, channelled his passion for cars to create a media property valuable enough for a major acquisition. Perhaps you too could take your own passion and turn it into a world-beating blog.
After seeing these success stories, it's natural to wonder how long it takes to earn an income from blogging. According to a 2026 consensus of industry data, you can expect to see your first small earnings within 3-6 months. Achieving a consistent part-time income typically takes 6-18 months. Building a blog into a full-time career often requires 3-4 years of dedicated effort, with factors like SEO, niche selection, and monetisation strategy playing a crucial role
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