Michelle Phan (born April 11, 1987) is an American entrepreneur, makeup artist, and internet personality renowned for pioneering beauty content on YouTube and building multimillion-dollar beauty businesses.[1] Born in Boston, Massachusetts, to Vietnamese refugee parents, Phan grew up in Tampa, Florida, amid financial hardships, including her biological father's gambling addiction and disappearance when she was six, followed by a strict stepfather.[1] She discovered her passion for art and cosmetics through her mother's nail salon work and self-taught skills, eventually attending Ringling College of Art and Design in 2006 before dropping out in 2007 to focus on online content creation.[1][2]Phan's career breakthrough came with her self-titled YouTube channel, launched in 2007, where her early tutorials—such as recreating celebrity looks like Lady Gaga's—quickly amassed millions of views, establishing her as one of the platform's first major beauty influencers with over 8 million subscribers by the mid-2010s, as of November 2025 approximately 8.55 million.[1][3][4] In 2010, she became the first YouTube creator signed as a spokesperson for Lancôme, marking a shift from content creation to commercial partnerships.[1] This success led to entrepreneurial ventures, including co-founding Ipsy in 2011, a subscription-based beauty box service that grew to an $800 million valuation by 2015 through $100 million in funding rounds.[1][5]In 2013, Phan launched her own cosmetics line, Em Cosmetics, initially through L'Oréal but facing challenges that led to a relaunch in 2017 under her company Divinium Labs, focusing on inclusive, high-performance products like the popular Cloud Dew cushion foundation.[1][6] She also co-founded the multi-channel networkIcon in 2013 to support emerging creators, later acquired by Endemol Shine.[7] Recognized as a Forbes 30 Under 30 honoree in 2015 and recipient of an honorary doctorate from Ringling College in 2014, Phan's influence extended to earning $3 million annually from YouTube by 2014, solidifying her role in democratizing beauty education online.[8][9]After a hiatus from social media in 2016 to address burnout and personal matters, Phan returned in 2019 with music-focused content on YouTube and continued promoting Em Cosmetics, maintaining an active presence on platforms like Instagram where she shares creative and philanthropic updates as of 2025.[1][10] She has kept her personal life private. She was previously in a long-term relationship with French-Italian model Dominique Capraro, which began in 2015.[1] Phan's legacy lies in transforming digital storytelling into a gateway for entrepreneurship, inspiring generations of creators in the beauty industry.[11]
Early life and education
Childhood and family
Michelle Phan was born on April 11, 1987, in Boston, Massachusetts, to Vietnamese immigrant parents who had fled their homeland as refugees following the Vietnam War.[1] Her family, including her older brother Steve, faced significant economic challenges from an early age, prompting a relocation to Tampa, Florida, where they hoped to find better opportunities amid ongoing financial instability.[1][12]The family's hardships were compounded by poverty, with frequent evictions—up to 10 in a single year—and reliance on food stamps for survival.[1] Phan's biological father struggled with gambling, often squandering rent money, and left the family when she was six years old.[1] Her mother, who had arrived in the United States with less than $20 and no English, took on multiple low-wage jobs, including as a nail technician, eventually opening her own salon to support the household.[13][1] After remarrying, Phan's mother introduced a younger half-sister, Christine, into the family, but the stepfather imposed strict rules, such as speaking only English at home and limiting social interactions, which added tension to the household dynamics shaped by Vietnamese cultural expectations of familial duty and resilience.[2][12] Phan often helped with household chores and cared for her younger sibling, reflecting the self-reliance her mother instilled amid these pressures.[2]Growing up around her mother's nail salon exposed Phan to the world of beauty from a young age, where she observed how makeup and grooming empowered women and boosted their confidence.[1][13] Unable to afford professional products, she taught herself makeup techniques using household items like her mother's Maybelline eyeliner and by studying books from the library by artists such as Laura Mercier and Bobbi Brown.[14][1] Her mother reinforced this by emphasizing beauty's transformative role, teaching Phan that it could foster inner strength and self-empowerment in the face of adversity.[15] This early environment, combined with the family's immigrant struggles, profoundly influenced Phan's creative interests and sense of independence.[15]
Academic background
Phan attended Tampa Bay Technical High School in Tampa, Florida, graduating in 2005.[16][17]In 2006, she enrolled at Ringling College of Art and Design in Sarasota, Florida, as a freshman majoring in illustration.[18][2]Facing severe financial difficulties amid her family's immigrant struggles from Vietnam, Phan could not afford the roughly $12,000 tuition per semester and dropped out in 2007 to dedicate herself full-time to online content creation.[2][19][16] To make ends meet, she supported herself through odd jobs, including waitressing and working as a restaurant hostess.[2][20]In 2014, Ringling College honored Phan's pioneering impact on digital media and the beauty industry by awarding her an honorary Doctorate of Arts degree.[21][19]
Michelle Phan launched her beauty blog in 2007 while attending Ringling College of Art and Design as a freshman, where she shared affordable makeup tutorials aimed at budget-conscious audiences seeking accessible beauty tips.[18][1] The blog built on her earlier Xanga posts from 2005, but it was during college that she focused on practical, low-cost demonstrations using drugstore products to empower everyday users.[1]In May 2007, Phan uploaded her first YouTube video, titled "Natural Looking Makeup Tutorial," filmed with a basic laptop camera in her backyard, demonstrating simple techniques for concealer, powder, eyeliner, and mascara to achieve an everyday look.[22][15][23] The video quickly gained traction, amassing over 40,000 views within a week and eventually surpassing 1 million, marking her entry into video content creation after blog readers requested visual guides.[1] By 2009, her YouTube channel had grown to approximately 60,000 subscribers, reflecting steady early adoption among beauty enthusiasts.[24]Phan's early videos featured a distinctive style with soft, ASMR-inspired voiceovers that created a calming, immersive experience, paired with diverse beauty looks drawing from pop culture influences such as everyday natural enhancements and fantasy themes.[24] For instance, her 2007 "Seductive Smokey Eyes Tutorial" became one of her initial breakthroughs, exceeding 100,000 views as her tenth upload, while 2009 content like "Lady GaGaPoker FaceTutorial" incorporated celebrity-inspired transformations to blend accessibility with creative flair.[25] Her background in animation and illustration from Ringling College enhanced her video production skills, allowing for polished editing and visual storytelling even in these nascent efforts.[18]Facing early monetization challenges on YouTube, which lacked robust revenue options initially, Phan relied on affiliate links from her blog and videos to generate modest income through product recommendations.[26] She joined YouTube's Partner Program in late 2008, enabling ad revenue, but earnings remained limited until broader growth.[1] This financial pressure contributed to her decision to drop out of Ringling College in 2007 after approximately one year, pivoting to full-time content creation to dedicate herself to the platform.[18][19]Phan built her initial audience through targeted search engine optimization on YouTube titles and descriptions, such as straightforward keywords like "natural makeup tutorial," alongside active community engagement by responding to comments and incorporating viewer suggestions into future videos.[23] This approach, combined with cross-promotion on her blog, fostered organic growth from 2007 to 2009, establishing a loyal following among young women seeking relatable beauty advice.[25]
Rise to prominence and collaborations
Phan's breakthrough came with her 2010 makeup tutorial recreating Lady Gaga's look from the "Bad Romance" music video, which quickly amassed millions of views and solidified her reputation as a trendsetter in beauty content.[27][28] Uploaded on January 18, 2010, the video demonstrated her ability to blend pop culture with accessible tutorials, drawing nearly 10 million views within months and inspiring a wave of fan recreations.[29] This success built on her earlier transition from blogging to YouTube in 2007, where she had already begun sharing makeup tips to a growing audience.By 2014, Phan's channel had reached the milestone of 1 billion total views, reflecting her expansive influence in the beauty community with over 6.9 million subscribers at the time.[30] Her subscriber count continued to grow, surpassing 8 million by 2015, a testament to her consistent output of innovative tutorials that resonated globally.[31]Phan's rise opened doors to major industry partnerships, starting with her appointment as Lancôme's official video makeup artist in February 2010, marking the brand's first collaboration with a YouTuber and its first with a Vietnamese-American ambassador.[32][33] This deal involved monthly videos featuring Lancôme products, bridging digital content with traditional cosmetics marketing. In 2014, she expanded into music by launching Shift Music Group in partnership with Cutting Edge Group, aiming to promote emerging artists through social media integration and her established platform.[34]
Hiatus and resurgence
In 2015, Michelle Phan abruptly entered an indefinite hiatus from YouTube, marking a sharp decline in her posting activity after years of consistent content creation.[35] This decision stemmed from severe burnout due to the disconnect between her public persona and private life, compounded by high-profile lawsuits related to her business endeavors, and a deep need for personal growth and self-reconnection.[36] Her final traditional beauty tutorial was uploaded in July 2016, after which her online presence dwindled further.[37]From 2015 to 2019, Phan's low activity period involved extensive travel—spanning nine months across various locations—to foster introspection and distance herself from social media's demands, while she shifted focus toward stabilizing her entrepreneurial projects.[36] This era fueled widespread media speculation about her "disappearance," with outlets and fans theorizing everything from health crises to complete withdrawal from the industry, amplifying concerns over her well-being.[38] In June 2017, she briefly resurfaced with an animated video titled "Why I Left," openly discussing her struggles with depression, insecurities, and the toll of fame, which garnered over 13 million views and reassured supporters of her offline thriving.[39]Phan made a more sustained return to YouTube in September 2019 with a short video titled "Hello," capturing a casual morning routine and captioned "I missed you," directly addressing fan worries about her absence and signaling a renewed connection.[40] This marked a thematic pivot toward wellness, mindfulness, and personal authenticity, moving away from high-production beauty tutorials to content emphasizing mental health, self-care, and holistic beauty.[41] By June 2019, she had experimented with a 24-hour live stream of ambient music, testing lighter, vibe-focused formats before recommitting to video storytelling.[10]Post-2020, Phan's resurgence gained momentum with consistent uploads centered on skincare routines, lifestyle reflections, and mindful practices, adapting to platform evolutions like shorter-form content on TikTok where she now boasts over 435,000 followers sharing authentic, unfiltered insights. In 2025, she achieved further success on TikTok Shop, being named one of the platform's top creators.[26] In 2024 and 2025, her output emphasized genuine self-expression over trend-chasing, navigating algorithm shifts by prioritizing long-term audience resonance—such as in a December2024 reflection on her 18-year creator journey as one of "being more herself"—rather than viral metrics.[42] This approach, informed by her hiatus lessons, has allowed her to rebuild engagement on wellness themes amid evolving digital landscapes.[43]
Business ventures
Ipsy cofounding and growth
In 2011, Michelle Phan co-founded Ipsy with Marcelo Camberos and Jennifer Goldfarb, launching it as a monthly beauty subscription service known as the Glam Bag, which delivered five personalized sample-sized beauty products to subscribers for $10 per month.[44][45] The concept drew from Phan's expertise in makeup tutorials, aiming to democratize access to premium beauty items through curation based on user quizzes about skin type, style preferences, and goals.[46][47]Ipsy experienced rapid expansion, reaching 1.5 million paid subscribers by mid-2015 and securing $100 million in Series B funding later that year, which valued the company at $500 million.[48][49] Phan's influence was central to this growth; as a key executive, she integrated content creation into the business model by producing promotional videos, unboxing content, and collaborating on product selections to align with her audience's tastes, effectively bridging her YouTube following with the subscription service's marketing strategy.[50][51]The company's ascent was not without hurdles, including a 2018 embezzlement scandal involving Phan's attorney, Michael Avenatti, who stole approximately $4 million from her proceeds of selling part of her Ipsy equity stake in 2017; Avenatti was convicted on related fraud charges in 2022 and sentenced to 14 years in federal prison.[52] In September 2017, Phan stepped down from her operational role at Ipsy to prioritize her personal brand and other ventures, though she maintained an equity stake in the company.[53][1]
EM Cosmetics launch and evolution
In 2013, Michelle Phan launched EM Cosmetics in partnership with L'Oréal as a direct-to-consumere-commerce brand, featuring over 250 products inspired by fan feedback from her YouTube makeup tutorials.[54][55] Early offerings included the refillable Day Life Palette, which combined 24 eyeshadow shades, four blushes, and eight lip colors in a modular design aimed at versatile daily use.[56] However, the brand faced significant challenges, including manufacturing inconsistencies, suboptimal product quality, and difficulties scaling production to meet demand, leading to underwhelming sales and operational strain.[57][58]In October 2015, Ipsy acquired EM Cosmetics from L'Oréal, but the line effectively shut down in 2016 amid these issues and her personal hiatus from public life.[59][60] She relaunched the brand independently in April 2017 under Divinium Labs after acquiring full ownership from Ipsy, shifting to a streamlined direct-to-consumer model with enhanced formulations focused on accessibility and quality control.[61] This iteration emphasized vegan, clean, cruelty-free beauty ingredients, drawing on Phan's Ipsy experience to curate user-friendly products.[62][63]Key innovations emerged in subsequent years, including the 2020 debut of the Daydream Cushion Foundation, a serum-infused, SPF-protected compact offering sheer-to-buildable coverage for a natural "glass skin" finish.[64] In 2024, the Portrait Mode collection introduced a blurring setting powder that mattifies and softens pores for an airbrushed effect, aligning with digital-era beauty trends.[65] A restock of the Portrait Mode powder was announced in August 2025, accompanied by live TikTok giveaways to engage fans directly.From 2024 to 2025, EM Cosmetics intensified its focus on clean beauty standards, promoting products like collagen-boosting serums for anti-aging and serum-infused blushes for radiant, skincare-like application via TikTok tutorials.[66] These efforts integrated with Phan's content resurgence, using short-form videos to demonstrate seamless blending and long-wear performance, fostering renewed community interaction.[67]
Additional entrepreneurial projects
In 2014, Phan ventured into the music industry by co-founding Shift Music Group, a record label in partnership with Cutting Edge Group, aimed at supporting emerging electronic and indie artists.[34] This initiative marked her expansion into music production and artist development, leveraging her influence to promote tracks in her beauty videos.[68]In 2024, Phan launched her podcast Afterglow with Michelle Phan, a weekly series exploring themes of wellness, creativity, and personal growth through in-depth interviews.[69] The podcast features conversations with influencers and experts; notable 2024 episodes include discussions with Rosanna Pansino on facing backlash and authenticity, and with Cassey Ho (founder of Blogilates) on overcoming body shaming and building a fitness brand.[70][71]Phan has supported Asian American causes through advocacy for greater representation in beauty and media, drawing from her Vietnamese-American heritage to promote inclusivity.[72] She has partnered with brands to enhance beauty accessibility, emphasizing affordable and diverse product options for underrepresented communities.[73]In 2025, Phan continued her creative output with an Instagram series reflecting on her online creation milestones, chronicling her journey from 2007 YouTube beginnings to modern digital entrepreneurship.[42] On TikTok, she shared educational content on skincare routines, including tutorials using serums for firm, hydrated skin and daily glow-up techniques with accessible products.
Personal life
Relationships and family
Michelle Phan has kept much of her personal life out of the public eye, particularly following her career hiatuses, but she entered a long-term relationship with model Dominique Capraro in the early 2010s. The couple, who connected online, maintained a two-year long-distance romance before meeting in person, with Capraro—a Swiss-born model of Italian and Swiss-Austrian heritage—relocating to Los Angeles to join her.[1][74]Phan and Capraro publicly acknowledged their relationship in 2013 through her YouTube video "My Boyfriend Does My Makeup," in which he participated, marking one of his early appearances in her content. The pair bonded over shared passions for travel, wellness practices, and creative pursuits, occasionally collaborating on posts that highlighted their joint experiences post-2016. After which they settled in Los Angeles, emphasizing a balanced lifestyle amid Phan's professional demands.[1][75]As of 2025, the couple resides in California and has no children, with Phan frequently discussing the value of work-life balance and personal recharge periods during her breaks from online visibility. In recent years, they have traveled to destinations like New Zealand and parts of Europe for reflection and healing, as noted in Phan's social media updates.[1][76]
Legal challenges
In July 2014, Michelle Phan faced a copyright infringement lawsuit filed by Ultra Records and Ultra International Music Publishing in the United States District Court for the Central District of California. The suit alleged that Phan had used approximately 50 tracks from Ultra's catalog without permission as background music in her YouTube videos and on her website, seeking damages of up to $150,000 per infringement.[77] The case, which highlighted tensions over music licensing in online content creation, was settled out of court in August 2015, with the terms including the removal of the disputed videos but no admission of liability by Phan.[78]Between 2017 and 2018, Phan became a victim of embezzlement by her former attorney, Michael Avenatti, who stole approximately $4 million from her as part of a larger scheme defrauding multiple clients. Avenatti, representing Phan in a business transaction involving the sale of her Ipsy shares for $35 million, withheld the final $4 million payment owed to her and her business partner, instead diverting the funds for personal and firm expenses, including luxury purchases.[52] Phan testified in Avenatti's federal wire fraud trial in August 2021 in Santa Ana, California, describing how he provided false assurances and excuses about the missing funds, which contributed to her financial and emotional distress.[79] The trial ended in a mistrial due to a juror issue, but Avenatti later pleaded guilty in 2022 to four counts of wire fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft related to the scheme, resulting in a 14-year federal prison sentence.[52]The 2014 copyright suit contributed to Phan's struggles with depression and anxiety, prompting her to take an indefinite hiatus from YouTube and public life starting in 2015 to prioritize her mental health. The later Avenatti embezzlement added to her ongoing stress and burnout.[80] She later reflected that the pressures of ongoing disputes and business demands had led to burnout, influencing her decision to step back for self-care and reevaluation.[81] As of 2025, Phan has not been involved in any major legal disputes since the resolution of the Avenatti case.
Recognition and impact
Awards and honors
Michelle Phan has received several notable awards recognizing her contributions to digital content creation and entrepreneurship in the beauty industry. In 2014, she won the Inspiration Icon Award at the 4th Annual Streamy Awards for her influential beauty tutorials that inspired millions worldwide.[82] The following year, at the 7th Annual Shorty Awards, Phan was honored with the Best YouTube Guru award, presented by FYI, for her expertise in makeup and lifestyle content on the platform.[83]Phan's impact extended beyond online video, earning her inclusion on Forbes' 2015 30 Under 30 list in the Art & Style category, highlighting her role as a pioneering YouTube creator who built a multimillion-dollar business from viral tutorials.[3] In 2014, she received an Honorary Doctorate of Arts degree in the Business of Art and Design from Ringling College of Art and Design, where she had briefly studied before dropping out to pursue her online career.[21]Following her resurgence in content creation, Phan co-hosted the winning entry for the Moment of Visionary Leadership category at the 2024 International Women's Podcast Awards, tied to her work on the "Unseen Upside: Investments Beyond Their Returns" episode, which explored innovative perspectives on personal and professional growth.[84] These accolades underscore her evolution from a breakout YouTube star—whose early videos like the 2009 "Barbie Transformation Tutorial" amassed tens of millions of views—to a multifaceted influencer and business leader.
Cultural and industry influence
Michelle Phan is widely recognized as a pioneer in the beauty YouTube space, where she emerged as one of the first major Vietnamese-American influencers, revolutionizing a predominantly white-dominated industry and inspiring a generation of diverse creators. By sharing accessible makeup tutorials starting in 2007, she normalized Asian representation in digital beauty content, galvanizing Asian American audiences who previously lacked visible role models in the sector.[85][81] Her innovative approach to vlogging not only amassed millions of followers but also paved the way for underrepresented voices to enter content creation, fostering greater inclusivity in online beauty communities.[73]Through her co-founding of Ipsy in 2011, Phan significantly influenced the beauty industry's adoption of the subscription box model, popularizing personalized sampling that allowed consumers to discover products affordably and tailored to their preferences. Ipsy's Glam Bag service, which delivered monthly curated samples for $10, grew to over 1 million subscribers by 2015 and captured approximately 75% of the beauty subscription market by the mid-2020s, setting a standard for direct-to-consumer personalization that competitors like BoxyCharm emulated.[51][50][46] This model transformed how brands engaged with customers, emphasizing community-driven discovery over traditional retail.[86]Phan's candid discussions about her 2015-2017 hiatus highlighted the mental health toll of creator life, advocating for resilience and self-care in digital spaces and sparking broader conversations among influencers about burnout. In interviews, she revealed experiencing depression and exhaustion from constant content demands, crediting her break with saving her life and encouraging others to prioritize well-being over productivity.[87][88] Her return via the Afterglow podcast in 2024 further amplified themes of personal growth and mental resilience, influencing creator communities to address similar pressures.[89]With EM Cosmetics, launched in 2013 and emphasizing cruelty-free, vegan formulations, Phan contributed to the clean beauty movement by promoting skin-loving, ethical products that prioritize inclusivity across diverse skin tones and sustainability in production.[90] The brand's focus on rethinking beauty standards aligned with growing consumer demands for transparent, eco-conscious options. Phan's legacy endures through her channel's over 1.1 billion views and initiatives like Summer School, a 2022 digital course empowering aspiring creators with mentorship on self-development and content strategies, as reflected in her 2025 discussions on 18 years of online entrepreneurship.[91][92][93]