Table of Contents >> Show >> Hide
- How We Chose These “Hot” Brunette TikTok Creators
- The 30+ Hottest Brunette TikTok Girls (With Photos)
- Dance, Pop Culture & Big-Account Energy
- Charli D’Amelio (@charlidamelio)
- Dixie D’Amelio (@dixiedamelio)
- Avani Gregg (@avani)
- Bella Poarch (@bellapoarch)
- Beauty, Hair & “I Bought It Because She Blinked” Reviews
- Mikayla Nogueira (@mikaylanogueira)
- Golloria George (@golloria)
- Monet McMichael (@monetmcmichael)
- Huda Kattan (@hudabeauty / @huda)
- Mari Maria (@marimaria)
- Abby Roberts (@abbyroberts)
- Comedy, Commentary & “Say It With Your Whole Chest” TikTok
- Brittany Broski (@brittany_broski)
- Drew Afualo (@drewafualo)
- Tefi Pessoa (@hellotefi)
- Sabrina Brier (@sabrinabrier)
- Quenlin Blackwell (@quenblackwell)
- Imane “Pokimane” Anys (@pokimane)
- Food, Home & Lifestyle (A.K.A. “Now I Want to Reorganize My Whole Life”)
- Meredith Hayden (Wishbone Kitchen) (@wishbonekitchen)
- Nara Smith (@naraaziza)
- Tabitha Brown (@iamtabithabrown)
- Hannah Neeleman (Ballerina Farm) (@ballerinafarm)
- Fashion, Style & “Outfit Math” That Somehow Makes Sense
- Chriselle Lim (@chrisellelim)
- Brittany Xavier (@brittanyxavier)
- Nava Rose (@the.navarose)
- Camila Coelho (@camilacoelho)
- Remi Bader (@remibader)
- Fitness, Wellness & “Okay Fine, I’ll Drink Water” Motivation
- Leana Deeb (@leanadeeb)
- Becca Bloom (@beccaxbloom)
- Smart Money, Career & “This Saved Me $300” Creator Talk
- Vivian Tu (@yourrichbff)
- Captain Kate McCue (@captainkatemccue)
- Relatable POV, Relationship Humor & Everyday “Main Character” Moments
- Brooke Monk (@brookemonk_)
- Nessa Barrett (@nessabarrett)
- Madeline Argy (@madelineargy)
- Heidi Wong (@itsheidiwong)
- Nature, Science & Smart Curiosity (Yes, It Can Still Be “Hot”)
- Alexis Nikole Nelson (@blackforager)
- Shina Novalinga (@shinanova)
- Bonus Brunette Picks (More Great Follows to Push You Past 30)
- How to Add Photos & TikTok Embeds Without Getting a Copyright Headache
- Why Brunette Aesthetics Pop on TikTok (And Why Brands Love It)
- FAQ: Brunette TikTok Creators, Photos, and Publishing
- Real-World Experiences: Following “Hot” Brunette TikTok Creators (500+ Words)
- Conclusion
Let’s define “hottest” before anyone clutches their pearls: in this article, “hot” means trendingthe creators whose videos keep
landing on For You Pages, group chats, and “how did I watch 47 of these in a row?” late-night scroll sessions.
And yes, we’re focusing on brunette creatorsmeaning they’re most commonly seen with naturally dark hair or brunette-forward looks
(because on TikTok, hair color changes about as often as audio trends).
You also asked for photos. Since you’ll be publishing this on the web (and nobody wants a copyright headache as a side quest),
each creator below includes a photo placeholder you can swap with an image you have rights to use (press kit, licensed photo,
your own original image, or an approved embed). Consider it “with photos” in the practical, publisher-friendly sense:
the layout is photo-ready.
How We Chose These “Hot” Brunette TikTok Creators
This isn’t a “who is the prettiest” ranking (TikTok already has enough comment sections trying to become a talent show judge).
Instead, this is a curated discovery list built around cultural relevance, consistency, and the kind of content that actually
keeps people watching. In plain English: creators who feel like they’re shaping what’s popular, not just reacting to it.
Our selection criteria
- Momentum: regular posting, strong engagement, and recognizable formats.
- Distinct niche: beauty, comedy, food, fashion, fitness, lifestyle, or “I don’t know what this is but I can’t stop watching.”
- Mainstream signal: featured in notable creator lists/profiles or broadly recognized outside TikTok.
- Brunette-forward look: commonly brunette (with the reality check that hair dye exists).
- Audience-safe focus: this list aims to highlight adult creators and creator worknot sexualized commentary.
One more context note: TikTok remains a daily habit for many Americansespecially younger adultsso “hot” can mean “new this week” or
“still somehow unstoppable after years.” Your feed is basically a living magazine rack, except it talks back. (Sometimes loudly.)
The 30+ Hottest Brunette TikTok Girls (With Photos)
Below are 33 brunette-forward TikTok creators to follow right now, grouped by the kind of content they’re best known for.
If you want to turn this into a “Top 33” ranking later, you canjust remember that TikTok trends change faster than your phone battery.
Dance, Pop Culture & Big-Account Energy
Charli D’Amelio (@charlidamelio)
One of the most recognizable faces of TikTok-era fame. Expect dance roots, mainstream crossover moments, and the kind of “internet-native”
polish that still feels casual.
Why follow: trend visibility, broad pop-culture relevance, and content that travels.
Dixie D’Amelio (@dixiedamelio)
A creator-to-entertainment pipeline example: personality-driven content, music-world adjacency, and a following built on familiarity.
Why follow: lifestyle + pop culture overlap, plus a very watchable “public life” arc.
Avani Gregg (@avani)
Known for bold makeup creativity and highly stylized looks that still feel funnot fussy. If your feed needs “wow” without the cringe,
she’s a reliable add.
Why follow: makeup artistry, transformation content, trend-savvy visuals.
Bella Poarch (@bellapoarch)
A creator who made minimalist expression feel like an event. Her presence is proof that “doing less” can be a power move when the timing is right.
Why follow: iconic TikTok-era moments, music crossover, clean visual branding.
Beauty, Hair & “I Bought It Because She Blinked” Reviews
Mikayla Nogueira (@mikaylanogueira)
Beauty content with personalitytutorials, product reactions, and commentary that turns a foundation review into a full episode.
Why follow: high-impact reviews, strong voice, and consistent beauty storytelling.
Golloria George (@golloria)
Beauty + consumer advocacy energy. If your feed needs smarter beauty conversationsnot just “this is cute”she delivers.
Why follow: product testing, inclusivity discussions, clear point-of-view.
Monet McMichael (@monetmcmichael)
Beauty and lifestyle content with a “real life but make it polished” vibe. Great for routines, products, and camera-ready confidence.
Why follow: wearable glam, approachable routines, lifestyle storytelling.
Huda Kattan (@hudabeauty / @huda)
A beauty founder with creator instincts: trend-literate, product-focused, and skilled at turning tutorials into mini-productions.
Why follow: big beauty energy, product demos, industry insight.
Mari Maria (@marimaria)
Beauty content with an emphasis on glam and techniqueespecially if you like dramatic eyes, glossy finishes, and “before/after” satisfaction.
Why follow: glam tutorials, transformation edits, event-ready looks.
Abby Roberts (@abbyroberts)
Makeup artistry and creative looks that lean “editorial,” but still feel like something you’d actually screenshot for inspiration.
Why follow: artistry, bold color stories, creative technique.
Comedy, Commentary & “Say It With Your Whole Chest” TikTok
Brittany Broski (@brittany_broski)
Unfiltered humor, big reactions, and a knack for turning internet weirdness into something weirdly comforting. The vibe is: your funniest friend,
but with a microphone budget.
Why follow: comedy, commentary, and very quotable moments.
Drew Afualo (@drewafualo)
Sharp commentary and confident delivery. If you like creators who can roast nonsense without sounding like a lecture,
this is your lane.
Why follow: quick-hit commentary, cultural takes, strong voice.
Tefi Pessoa (@hellotefi)
Pop culture recaps that feel like FaceTiming a friend who actually remembers everyone’s name and the plot from three seasons ago.
Why follow: storytelling, pop culture clarity, warm delivery.
Sabrina Brier (@sabrinabrier)
Character-driven humor that feels painfully real (in the best way). If you’ve ever had a group chat spiral, her sketches may feel… familiar.
Why follow: relatable characters, timing, and “that’s literally my friend” energy.
Quenlin Blackwell (@quenblackwell)
Chaotic comedy and personality-first content. The humor is bold, the pacing is fast, and the vibe is “I didn’t plan this, and that’s why it works.”
Why follow: comedic unpredictability and big personality.
Imane “Pokimane” Anys (@pokimane)
Streaming-world influence with TikTok-friendly edits, reactions, and behind-the-scenes moments. Great for gaming-adjacent culture content.
Why follow: internet culture, creator economy crossovers, personable clips.
Food, Home & Lifestyle (A.K.A. “Now I Want to Reorganize My Whole Life”)
Meredith Hayden (Wishbone Kitchen) (@wishbonekitchen)
Food and lifestyle content that makes cooking feel stylish but not intimidating. Expect “day in the life” energy with chef-level payoff.
Why follow: recipes, hosting vibes, and cozy-but-polished storytelling.
Nara Smith (@naraaziza)
Aesthetic cooking and home life with a distinctive, calming delivery style. The visuals are clean, the food is dramatic,
and the “made from scratch” commitment is… ambitious.
Why follow: aspirational home content, cinematic cooking, strong aesthetic identity.
Tabitha Brown (@iamtabithabrown)
Food, kindness, and comfort all in one place. If your feed needs a “deep breath” section, her videos are basically a warm blanket with seasoning.
Why follow: uplifting vibes, recipes, and a signature voice that feels genuinely human.
Hannah Neeleman (Ballerina Farm) (@ballerinafarm)
Farm-and-family lifestyle with a strong visual identity. Whether you find it inspiring or just fascinating, it’s undeniably “watchable.”
Why follow: homestead visuals, routines, and satisfying process content.
Fashion, Style & “Outfit Math” That Somehow Makes Sense
Chriselle Lim (@chrisellelim)
Elevated style content that’s wearable, not costume-y. Great for capsule wardrobe ideas, polished fits, and “grown-up cool.”
Why follow: timeless styling, fashion tips, clean visuals.
Brittany Xavier (@brittanyxavier)
Fashion-forward content with a strong sense of styling and presentation. If you love outfit transitions, this is a safe bet.
Why follow: outfit inspiration, trend edits, polished fashion storytelling.
Nava Rose (@the.navarose)
Bold fashion, strong silhouettes, and statement styling. If your closet is 70% neutrals and you want to change that… start here.
Why follow: maximal styling, creative outfits, trend-forward energy.
Camila Coelho (@camilacoelho)
Beauty-meets-fashion content with a luxe finish. Expect event looks, styling moments, and a high-gloss feed aesthetic.
Why follow: polished fashion, glam, and a consistent premium vibe.
Remi Bader (@remibader)
Fashion with honesty. Great for try-ons, fit reality checks, and the kind of “let’s talk about it” style commentary that helps people shop smarter.
Why follow: try-ons, body-positive fashion, practical style takes.
Fitness, Wellness & “Okay Fine, I’ll Drink Water” Motivation
Leana Deeb (@leanadeeb)
Fitness and wellness content that emphasizes consistency. If you like workout inspiration that isn’t screaming at you, add her to your list.
Why follow: motivation, routines, approachable fitness content.
Becca Bloom (@beccaxbloom)
Fitness lifestyle and gym content that’s easy to slot into your own routineespecially if you like short, practical clips over long lectures.
Why follow: gym routines, motivation, quick tips you can actually use.
Smart Money, Career & “This Saved Me $300” Creator Talk
Vivian Tu (@yourrichbff)
Personal finance made digestible. If you want money advice that doesn’t require a spreadsheet funeral, her content is a great entry point.
Why follow: budgeting basics, financial literacy, fast clarity.
Captain Kate McCue (@captainkatemccue)
Career + lifestyle content with a “here’s what my job is really like” angle. Great if you love behind-the-scenes work-life storytelling.
Why follow: career visibility, day-in-the-life clips, leadership content that’s not boring.
Relatable POV, Relationship Humor & Everyday “Main Character” Moments
Brooke Monk (@brookemonk_)
Known for humorous, relatable POV videos that feel like your own internal monologue got a ring light.
Why follow: easy-to-binge humor, clean storytelling, and consistent posting style.
Nessa Barrett (@nessabarrett)
Music-forward creator energy with a TikTok-native fanbase. If you like the intersection of aesthetic clips, music culture, and creator fame,
she’s a notable follow.
Why follow: music crossover, strong aesthetic identity, fan-community momentum.
Madeline Argy (@madelineargy)
Storytime and personality-driven content that feels like casual chattinguntil you realize you’ve been listening for 12 minutes and you’re invested.
Why follow: conversational storytelling, relatable perspective, binge-friendly formats.
Heidi Wong (@itsheidiwong)
Lifestyle content with personalitythink day-in-the-life, relatable commentary, and a “come with me” vibe that plays well on modern TikTok.
Why follow: casual lifestyle storytelling and consistent format clarity.
Nature, Science & Smart Curiosity (Yes, It Can Still Be “Hot”)
Alexis Nikole Nelson (@blackforager)
Foraging, food science, and nature education delivered with humor and charm. You’ll learn, you’ll laugh, you’ll suddenly look at weeds differently.
Why follow: educational content that doesn’t feel like homework.
Shina Novalinga (@shinanova)
Beauty and style moments mixed with cultural storytelling and strong visual presence. A great follow if you like content with identity and vibe.
Why follow: aesthetic visuals plus deeper contextrare, and refreshing.
Bonus Brunette Picks (More Great Follows to Push You Past 30)
- Becky Kennedy (@drbeckyatgoodinside) parenting/psychology content with clear framing and practical tips.
- Mary Claire Haver (@drmaryclaire) women’s health education content delivered in an accessible format.
- V Spehar (@underthedesknews) news explainers and commentary built for the TikTok attention span.
- Camila Coelho (already listed above) included here as a reminder that her glam content fits multiple categories.
Photo note: Hair changes happen. If someone is blonde this week and brunette next week, welcome to the internet.
Use the latest approved image or embed a recent TikTok post that clearly matches your “brunette” theme.
How to Add Photos & TikTok Embeds Without Getting a Copyright Headache
If you’re publishing a “with photos” listicle, the safest approach is: use images you own or have licensed, or use
official embeds that keep attribution intact.
Three publisher-friendly options
- Licensed photos: purchase a license (stock or editorial) and keep proof of license.
- Press/creator media kits: many creators (or their representation) provide approved press photos.
- Embeds: embed a TikTok post or creator profile so attribution is built in.
HTML example: photo-ready creator card
HTML example: TikTok embed placeholder (swap in your actual post URL later)
Pro tip: If you’re doing lots of creators, consider a consistent image size (same aspect ratio) so the page doesn’t look like
it got dressed in the dark.
Why Brunette Aesthetics Pop on TikTok (And Why Brands Love It)
“Brunette TikTok” isn’t one aestheticit’s a collection of visual and cultural signals that tend to read as
classic, grounded, and high-contrast on camera. And TikTok is a camera-first platform.
1) Contrast helps the scroll stop
Dark hair often creates stronger contrast against skin tone and background lighting, especially in indoor settings.
That contrast can make faces and expressions easier to read at a glancewhich matters when viewers decide in a split second whether to keep watching.
2) Brunette reads “timeless,” not “trendy-only”
Blonde, neon, pastel, copperevery color cycles hard. Brunette tends to feel less like a seasonal costume and more like a “signature look,”
which can help creators build a recognizable brand.
3) The content niches that dominate TikTok pair well with brunette-forward styling
- Beauty: makeup shows up cleanly against dark hair framing the face.
- Food: cozy kitchen visuals + brunette “soft glam” is basically a genre now.
- Comedy/storytime: facial expressions matter; contrast helps.
- Fashion: brunette hair often acts like a neutral anchor for bold outfits.
4) “Hot” on TikTok is often about format, not fame
Many of the hottest creators win because they repeat what works: recognizable hooks, consistent editing, and a clear promise
(teach me, make me laugh, show me a recipe, help me get dressed, help me save money).
Hair color is the cover of the booknot the whole story.
FAQ: Brunette TikTok Creators, Photos, and Publishing
Do I need to rank them 1–33 for SEO?
Not necessarily. Grouping by niche can improve readability and reduce bounce. If you do rank them, keep the ranking criteria consistent
(engagement, cultural impact, niche leadership).
Can I use creators’ TikTok profile pictures as photos?
It’s safer to use approved/licensed images or embeds. Profile pictures and screenshots can still raise rights issues depending on how you use them.
When in doubt: embed.
What’s the best way to keep this article fresh?
Update quarterly: swap in new trending creators, add recent viral formats, and rotate embeds. TikTok moves fastyour list should, too.
How do I avoid making this feel objectifying?
Focus on creator work: niche, storytelling, format, impact, and why their content resonates. “Hot” can mean relevantwithout turning people into trophies.
Real-World Experiences: Following “Hot” Brunette TikTok Creators (500+ Words)
If you’ve ever followed a few creators “just to see what the hype is,” you already know how this goes: one follow becomes five, then suddenly your
For You Page starts acting like it got your personality test results and decided to redecorate. What’s interesting is that the experience of
following trending brunette creators often feels less about hair color and more about how their content sits inside your daily life.
For a lot of people, brunette-forward creator feeds tend to land in a sweet spot between “aspirational” and “relatable.” You’ll notice this most in
beauty and lifestyle videos: the lighting is warm, the backgrounds are homey (kitchens, bedrooms, cars, bathroomsTikTok’s four natural habitats),
and the creator’s look often feels like something you could actually recreate without a Hollywood trailer and a team of stylists.
Even when the content is high-gloss, it’s frequently packaged as everyday life: get-ready-with-me routines, quick product tests, a recipe that starts
with “I had nothing in the fridge” and ends with a meal that could win a small award.
Another common experience is the “format comfort” effect. Once you follow creators who have a consistent structurelike a signature intro,
a predictable punchline beat, or a recurring seriesyou start to recognize their videos instantly. That recognition matters on TikTok.
It’s the same reason people rewatch sitcoms: your brain likes knowing what’s coming, even if it still laughs at the joke.
Comedy creators do this especially well. You’ll catch yourself thinking, “Oh, this is one of those videos,” and your thumb stops scrolling.
The video didn’t win because it begged for attention; it won because it felt familiar in a good way.
If you’re a creator (or a marketer) watching these accounts, the experience gets even more specific. You start noticing the craft:
the first two seconds, the pacing, the captions, the way cuts happen right before a moment would get boring. You’ll notice how often “brunette aesthetic”
is really “camera-friendly framing”: hair that outlines the face, neutral backgrounds that make facial expressions pop, and outfits that avoid noisy patterns
when the message is the main event. It’s not magicit’s visual strategy that reads like effortlessness.
There’s also a very real “micro-influence” moment that happens after you follow enough trending creators: you start adopting tiny behaviors.
Not huge life changesmore like small upgrades that feel satisfying. You reorganize a shelf. You try a new lip combo. You cook one recipe.
You finally understand what “capsule wardrobe” means. This is the sneaky power of TikTok: it sells you the idea that small improvements are doable
today, in your real life, not in a fantasy version where you wake up at 5 a.m. smiling.
And yes, sometimes the experience is simply entertainment. Some creators feel like a break in the day: a funny story, a calm voiceover, a quick tutorial,
or a recipe that’s satisfying to watch even if you’ll never make it. That’s still valuable. In a world where attention is expensive, creators who can deliver
comfort, clarity, or laughter in under a minute are basically performing a public service. (No cape required, but it would probably go viral.)
The best part? Once you start curating your follows by nichebeauty, food, fashion, comedy, financeyou build a feed that works like a personalized magazine.
And if you’re publishing this article, that’s the promise you’re making readers: “Here are the accounts that make your scroll feel worth it.”
Conclusion
“Hottest” doesn’t have to mean shallowit can mean most relevant. The brunette creators above are trending because they’re
consistent, watchable, and good at making you feel something: inspired, entertained, informed, or oddly motivated to clean your kitchen at midnight.
Swap in licensed photos or approved embeds, keep the list updated, and you’ve got a page that can stay evergreen even when TikTok trends change overnight.
