United Kingdom
Dj-Audits is a United Kingdom-based creator operating in the public-filming audit niche — a style of content that involves visiting industrial estates,…
Total Followers +0.6%
647K
Across YouTube, TikTok
Primary Platform
YouTube
254K followers · 39% of audience
Engagement
6.9%
vs. 1.5% category median
Sponsorship Tier
Mid
Est. — / IG post
Staff at the COMAH-rated facility in Wincham confronted him while he was filming outside, leading to a police callout and an arrest on suspicion of assault. He was de-arrested and released at the scene, and told reporters the response was 'disproportionate.' THOR said he had been filming on their land and cited a legitimate security concern at the hazardous site.
A reported feature on YouTubers shaping British political discourse traced the origins of the auditor trend back to channels like DJ Audits, noting how his apolitical filming-rights content inspired a wider wave of creators.
| Window | YouTube | TikTok | Combined | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Last 7 days | +3K +1.2% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +3K |
| Last 30 days | +4K +1.6% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +4K |
| Last 90 days | +7K +2.8% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +7K |
| Last 365 days | +7K +2.8% | +0 +0.0% | +0 +0.0% | +7K |
Daily follower snapshots from CreatorDB's longitudinal index.
Dj-Audits is a United Kingdom-based creator operating in the public-filming audit niche — a style of content that involves visiting industrial estates, commercial properties, and public spaces to document interactions with security personnel and police over the legality of filming in public. The channel's drone-and-camera combination gives the content a distinctive look: aerial establishing shots paired with ground-level confrontations, often capturing heated exchanges about filming rights, trespass law, and security protocols. Post titles referencing section numbers and unlawful detention language reflect a format well-established in the UK, where 'auditing' channels have built dedicated followings by stress-testing the boundaries of public photography law. The Prime Hydration and KSI-adjacent hashtags in their content suggest at least one high-traffic video tied to the brand's UK warehouse or distribution presence, likely responsible for a meaningful spike in cross-Atlantic reach.
The audience skews heavily male and concentrates in the 18-to-34 bracket — a demographic drawn to confrontational, rights-aware content with a procedural edge. While the channel is UK-based, nearly half its viewership sits in the United States, where a parallel 'First Amendment auditor' culture creates natural appetite for the same format. This transatlantic appeal keeps the channel competitive beyond its domestic niche. Engagement sits well above category norms, which aligns with the inherently reactive format: audit content tends to generate strong comment volume around legal interpretation and viewer outrage. Brand partnership opportunities are somewhat constrained by the adversarial tone — mainstream consumer brands are cautious fits — but gear and tech sponsors, legal education platforms, and drone manufacturers represent credible alignment. With consistent daily output and a format that travels well across YouTube long-form and TikTok short clips, Dj-Audits is positioned to consolidate within a small but loyal segment of civics-adjacent, confrontation-driven content.
Dj-Audits reaches an audience concentrated in United Kingdom primarily through YouTube, and is best activated via long-form YouTube integrations, TikTok branded content. As a vlog creator they map naturally to brands targeting that space. Engagement on YouTube runs around 6.9%, pointing to an audience suited to category-relevant, mid-funnel brand campaigns rather than pure-reach buys.
Benchmark estimates for a creator at Dj-Audits's tier (Mid, 647K combined followers, United Kingdom). 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.
Dj-Audits visits industrial estates, restricted buildings, and other notable locations across the UK to document what's there and assert their right to film. Their content sits firmly in the public auditing genre, where the drama comes from confrontations with security guards and officials who try to challenge or remove them.
Yes — Dj-Audits is part of the UK public auditor community, a genre of creator who films in public and semi-public spaces to test and assert their legal rights. Their video titles regularly feature security personnel invoking building policies, demanding ID, and threatening arrest, which are hallmarks of the auditing niche.
Section 39 refers to Section 39 of the Criminal Justice Act 1988, which covers common assault and battery offences in England and Wales. In Dj-Audits' videos, security guards or other officials sometimes invoke it — often incorrectly — when trying to challenge the creator for filming on their premises.
Yes — their TikTok bio explicitly describes them as an "industrial estate videographer and drone flyer." Drone footage is a core part of their visual style, letting them capture aerial perspectives of the industrial and built-environment locations they visit.
Industrial estates occupy a legal grey area — they are often privately owned but accessible to the public — making them a prime setting for the kind of security confrontations that define Dj-Audits' content. Their TikTok bio literally leads with "industrial estate videographer," signalling that these locations are as much part of the brand identity as any individual video.
Rivercide is a UK campaign documenting catastrophic pollution in English rivers, and Dj-Audits uses it alongside #SaveTheWye — a specific effort to protect the River Wye on the Wales-England border from agricultural run-off damage. Their use of these hashtags signals that the channel engages with environmental and activist causes beyond straightforward filming confrontations.
Stop Elbit is a UK protest campaign targeting Elbit Systems, an Israeli defence company with manufacturing facilities in Britain that has been the subject of sustained activist pressure. Dj-Audits' use of the #StopElbit hashtag suggests they have attended or filmed activity connected to protests at Elbit-linked sites, fitting their pattern of documenting notable and contested locations.
In England and Wales, members of the public have no general legal obligation to show ID to private security guards, and the obligation to identify yourself to police is limited to specific circumstances. Dj-Audits' videos regularly feature them declining ID requests on camera, which is a central argument of the UK public auditing movement they are part of.
According to their own TikTok bio, Dj-Audits uploads a full video to YouTube at 4 PM daily, making them one of the more consistent creators in the UK auditing space. Their YouTube channel confirms very recent and frequent uploads in line with that schedule.
Dj-Audits is based in the United Kingdom, which is where the industrial estates and locations they film are situated. Despite being a UK creator, the largest share of their audience is actually in the United States, reflecting the global appetite for public auditing content regardless of where it is filmed.
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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@dj-audits · YouTube
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