YOUNG STAR

My daughter had a million TikTok followers at 13 – now she’s a full-time influencer & can buy a £300k house

Watch our video to see Ami's story

MANY teenagers love scrolling on TikTok - but one 16-year-old’s videos have done so well she can now afford a £300,000 house.

Amelie Hobson, who goes by Ami Charlize, is one of Britain's most successful social-media stars and now does it full-time after she completed her GCSEs.

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Ami Charlize left school at 16 to pursue influencing full-timeCredit: TikTok @amicharlize
Although she won't say what she earns, she could afford a £300,000 homeCredit: Amelie Charlize

Although she started out doing dance videos and lip syncs at the age of 13, she now shows her fashion and make-up routines too.

Essex-based Ami has amassed over 3.4million followers, and had already hit seven figures by the age of 13.

Not only does she have a massive following but she also runs a podcast, is a PrettyLittleThing ambassador and is publishing a new book called: My World: Challenges, Changes and Chasing My Dreams.

As reported by Ami’s mum Dawn Hobson, 52, said of her daughter: “She's just leading an amazing life.”

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Although she won’t say how much her teenage daughter earns from brand deals and collaborations, Ami could afford to buy a £300,000 house.

Dawn added: “For now we're investing it. We were thinking we could buy her a house for £200,000 to £300,000 but you get stamp duty paid for your first house so she should do it when she's older and buys the house she really wants to live in. That would save her a lot. We don't take a penny from her, though.”

Ami insists she doesn’t consider herself wealthy, however, and recently told her 346,000 YouTube followers “I haven't £1 million in my bank account? I don't personally think I'm rich.”

Currently her money is managed by dad Mark, 53, who retired at 50 thanks to his successful water-treatment business, and Dawn, who worked in a City investment bank before becoming a full-time mother after her second daughter Georgia, now 23, was born. 

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As with many influencers, Ami is frequently bombarded with freebies from brands, but Dawn has warned her to not show everything she gets.

This is because the teen can earn what people make in a year with one brand deal.

 investigation came across several accounts run by children under 13 - with some as young as nine years old.

The report also found the video-sharing app failed to remove online predators who were sending sexual messages to teenagers and children.

Over three months, the investigation collected hundreds of sexual comments posted on videos uploaded by teenagers and children.

While the company deleted the majority of these comments, the users who posted them were able to remain on the platform, despite TikTok's own rules against sexual content directed at children.

The BBC was also able to identity a number of users who, again and again, approached teenage girls online to post sexually explicit messages on their videos.

All comments found by the BBC were reported to TikTok using the same tools available to any user of the app.

Dawn said it was a “hard decision” for the family as she was worried her daughter would miss out on making new friends.

However, she said she understood Ami’s reluctance, as once she had tried to join a netball team and people were either “in awe or mean to her.”

Ami’s parents decided to let her pursue influencing full-time, but said the authorities ring them frequently to check up on her.

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In the UK, you can leave school on the last Friday in June if you’ll be 16 by the end of the summer holidays.

However, although you do not have  to go to school, you typically have to remain in education, employment or training until the age of 18.

Ami said she has made new friends through her work, but if she “spoils” them “too quickly” it can be thrown back in her face.

She has also learned to keep any relationships private, as fans previously got angry when she split with an ex they thought she would marry.

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While Ami had her first phone at the age of 10, many people feel there should be a ban on under-16s owning smartphones.

Studies have shown that there can be links between anxiety and loss of concentration with the owning of a smartphone.

Ami said she thinks 10 is the right age to get one, and said she wouldn’t have enjoyed school as much if she wasn’t able to watch TikTok.

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