Vlad and Niki
YouTube channel operated by Vashketov siblings
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vlad and Niki is a YouTube channel featuring Russian–American siblings Vladislav "Vlad" Vashketov (born February 26, 2013), Nikita Vashketov (born June 4, 2015), Christian Vashketov (born September 11, 2019), and Alice Vashketova (born January 1, 2022). Sergey Vashketov and Victoria Vashketova,[1][2] emigrated from Moscow, Russia[3] and run 21 YouTube channels in 18 languages. The kids reside in Miami and occasionally in Dubai.[3] Vlad & Niki is the 7th most-viewed and 5th most-subscribed YouTube channel in the world.[4]
February 26, 2013
Miami, Florida, U.S.
Nikita Vashketov
June 4, 2015
Miami, Florida, U.S.
Christian Vashketov
September 11, 2019
Florida, U.S.
Alice Vashketova
January 1, 2022
Florida, U.S.
- Sergey Vashketov (father)
- Victoria Vashketova (mother)
Vlad and Niki | |
|---|---|
| Born | Vladislav Vashketov February 26, 2013 Miami, Florida, U.S. Nikita Vashketov June 4, 2015 Miami, Florida, U.S. Christian Vashketov September 11, 2019 Florida, U.S. Alice Vashketova January 1, 2022 Florida, U.S. Miami, Florida, United States |
| Parents |
|
| YouTube information | |
| Channel | |
| Years active | 2018–present |
| Genres | |
| Subscribers | 149 million |
| Views | 120.30 billion |
| Last updated: 9 April 2026 | |
Parent career
Vlad and Niki's parents, Sergey and Victoria, each had different careers. Sergey worked in sales, while Victoria was a homemaker and a former gymnast.
History
Vlad and Nikita started their YouTube channel on April 23, 2018, prompting their father to quit his sales job to help with brands and licensing based on "Vlad Crazyshow" (stylized as "Joker").[5] Their videos include roleplays, vlogging, and advertising.[6] The channel signed a representation deal with Haven Global, an Australian-based licensing agency, to develop new content, consumer products, and licenses for mobile apps under their brand.[1][7] They also signed a deal with Playmates Toys, a Hong Kong–based manufacturer, to produce toys under their brand.[8] In 2019, the brothers were judged to be the YouTubers making the most money per video at an estimated US$312,000 per video.[9] As of November 11, 2025, they had 147 million subscribers.