Japan
Alina & Amelia is a creator with a presence on YouTube (12,800,000 followers), TikTok (2,600,000 followers), based in Japan.
Total Followers +1.3%
15.4M
Across YouTube, TikTok
Primary Platform
YouTube
12.8M followers · 83% of audience
Engagement
2.5%
vs. 1.5% category median
Sponsorship Tier
Mega
Est. — / IG post
| Window | YouTube | TikTok | Combined | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Last 7 days | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +0 |
| Last 30 days | +204K +1.6% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +204K |
| Last 90 days | +521K +4.1% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +521K |
| Last 365 days | +521K +4.1% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +521K |
Daily follower snapshots from CreatorDB's longitudinal index.
Alina & Amelia is a creator with a presence on YouTube (12,800,000 followers), TikTok (2,600,000 followers), based in Japan. Their content sits in the comedy & entertainment space. Their YouTube bio reads: "Thank you for subscribing! Creating fun content to make you smile✨ Based in Tokyo🇯🇵🗼". The full audience and engagement breakdown is below.
Alina & Amelia reaches an audience concentrated in Japan primarily through YouTube, and is best activated via long-form YouTube integrations, TikTok branded content. As a comedy creator they map naturally to brands targeting that space. Engagement on YouTube runs around 2.5%, pointing to an audience suited to category-relevant, mid-funnel brand campaigns rather than pure-reach buys.
Benchmark estimates for a creator at Alina & Amelia's tier (Mega, 15.4M combined followers, Japan). Pulled from CreatorDB's category benchmarks.
The CreatorDB Agency runs end-to-end influencer campaigns globally — shortlisting, outreach, contracting, and performance reporting. Talk to our team about building a campaign around creators in this niche.
The handle @alinasaito points to Alina Saito as one of the two creators behind the channel, with the account registered under her name. The duo brands themselves together as "Alina & Amelia," making the channel a joint project while the underlying account identity belongs to Alina.
Yes — both creators are based in Tokyo, Japan, which they highlight in both their YouTube and TikTok bios. Despite being Tokyo-based, their largest single audience is in the United States, followed closely by Japan, reflecting the global pull of their English-language Shorts content.
Their content is produced primarily in English, which matches their audience data showing the United States as their top viewership country ahead of Japan. Being Tokyo-based creators who make English-language videos has given them a rare dual foothold in both the US and Japanese markets.
The "REAL or FAKE?" series is one of their signature Shorts formats, where they test outrageous or unexpected food combinations and react to whether the pairing actually works. The quick-reveal structure makes it highly rewatchable and perfectly suited to the Shorts feed where their channel has built most of its audience.
Their life hack content covers everyday problem-solving tricks presented in punchy, visual short-form clips — recent examples include a broken screen life hack, tin foil nail ideas, and testing a viral knife sharpener. These videos sit alongside their food challenge series as one of the two main content pillars driving their YouTube growth.
Pokémon is one of their most-used hashtags, indicating they regularly tie Pokémon themes or references into their broader mix of challenge and comedy content. Given their general format of testing and reacting to things, Pokémon-related challenges or trend videos fit naturally into their upload schedule.
The Netflix show Wednesday appears as one of their top hashtags, suggesting they tapped into the viral Wednesday Addams dance trend or created parody content around the show. Jumping on major pop-culture moments quickly is a core part of the content strategy that has driven their channel into the Mega tier.
Roughly two-thirds of their audience is male, which is a notable skew for a lifestyle-and-comedy channel. This pattern is typical of creators who lean heavily into challenge videos, life hack tests, and reaction-style Shorts — formats that attract a broad, curiosity-driven viewership that trends male across the platform.
The channel has grown to over 12 million subscribers on YouTube alone, placing it firmly in the Mega tier globally. Their Shorts-first strategy has kept subscriber growth steady, and their engagement runs notably above the category median, which is rare at that scale.
Yes — they maintain a TikTok presence under the same @alinasaito handle, with their TikTok bio mirroring their YouTube description word for word. YouTube is their dominant platform by a wide margin in terms of followers, though TikTok serves as a secondary distribution channel for their Shorts-style clips.
Stats (followers, engagement, audience demographics, growth) are pulled live from the CreatorDB API covering YouTube, Instagram and TikTok. Bio and FAQ content is AI-assisted; news items are sourced from cited public press at generation time. Read the full methodology →
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@alinasaito · YouTube
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