What Is Chappell Roan's Net Worth?
Chappell Roan is an American singer and songwriter who has a net worth of $10 million. Chappell Roan launched her music career as a teenager in Missouri under her birth name, Kayleigh Rose Amstutz. After signing with Atlantic Records at age 17, she adopted the stage name Chappell Roan and released her debut EP "School Nights" in 2017. Despite early promise, she was later dropped from the label, leading to a period working as a waitress in Los Angeles while independently developing her music.
Her artistic reinvention culminated in the 2022 release of "Pink Pony Club," a breakthrough single that became celebrated in LGBTQ+ communities for its story of a small-town girl becoming a drag club dancer. The song showcased her evolution toward more theatrical pop production and explicitly queer themes.
In September 2023, she released her debut full-length album, "The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess," to critical acclaim. The album, featuring singles like "My Kink is Karma" and "Red Wine Supernova," established her as an emerging pop artist with a distinctive vision. Her subsequent headlining tour demonstrated her growth as a live performer, incorporating elaborate costumes and theatrical elements inspired by drag culture. On February 2, 2025, Chapell won the Best New Artist Grammy.
Early Years
Chappell Roan was born Kayleigh Rose Amstutz on February 19, 1998, in Willard, Missouri. She is the Dwight and Kara Amstutz. Her father was a registered nurse, and her mother was a veterinarian. Chappell was the youngest of four children and was raised in a very religious and conservative trailer park household. She began playing the piano at the age of ten and, four years later, auditioned for the American television show "America's Got Talent," which proved to be unsuccessful for her.
At the age of 15, Roan began posting original music videos of herself on YouTube. Her song "Die Young" attracted the attention of several record label executives, and at the age of 17, she was signed by Atlantic Records.
Early Rise & Fall from Fame
She began her music career by posting piano ballads and pop covers on YouTube as a teenager in Missouri. Her 2014 original song "Die Young" caught the attention of Atlantic Records, and she signed with the label in 2015 while still in high school. Around that time, she adopted the stage name Chappell Roan to honor her grandfather Dennis K. Chappell, who had died of brain cancer. "Chappell" came from his name, while "Roan" referenced "The Strawberry Roan," a Western ballad he loved.
In 2017, she released her debut EP, "School Nights," showcasing a moody, piano-driven style. She moved to Los Angeles the following year, where she began living openly as a queer woman and toured with English artist Declan McKenna. Though she showed promise, Roan struggled to break through commercially.
Everything changed in April 2020 with the release of "Pink Pony Club," a glittering, euphoric pop anthem inspired by The Abbey, a gay nightclub in West Hollywood. The song received widespread acclaim—USA Today named it the #3 song of the year—and it went viral on streaming platforms. However, her next two singles, "Love Me Anyway" and "California," underperformed. In August 2020, Atlantic dropped her from the label.
Soon after, Roan was diagnosed with bipolar II disorder and moved back to her hometown in Missouri. She took a job at a drive-through and began writing new music independently, while quietly rebuilding her mental health and artistic vision. Though it was a low point personally and professionally, this period of retreat laid the foundation for her eventual resurgence.

(Photo by Emma McIntyre/Getty Images)
Getting Back Up
In early 2022, Chappell Roan returned to Los Angeles with a renewed sense of purpose. She supported herself by working as a barista in a donut shop and as a production assistant while continuing to write and record music on her own terms. That March, she signed a publishing deal with Sony Music and released "Naked in Manhattan," a confident and flirty ode to queer love that NPR described as a "queer girl bop."
Roan's flamboyant style, powerful vocals, and theatrical live shows began earning her a cult following. She opened for Fletcher and Olivia Rodrigo in 2022, gaining exposure to larger audiences. In 2023, she launched her first headlining tour, "Naked in North America," with drag queens as opening acts and elaborate camp-inspired sets. That fall, she signed with Amusement Records, an imprint of Island Records, and released her debut album, "The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess," in September.
The album was a critical triumph, landing on year-end "Best Of" lists from Rolling Stone, TIME, Billboard, and Vogue. She followed up with "The Midwest Princess Tour," donating $1 from each ticket to For the Gworls, a Black, trans-led collective supporting gender-affirming care and housing needs.
In April 2024, Roan released "Good Luck, Babe!," a bittersweet anthem about a woman in denial of her queerness. The song became her breakout hit, debuting at #77 on the Billboard Hot 100, entering Spotify's Top Ten, and peaking at #4 by summer. She performed it at Coachella and on "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert," drawing comparisons to Lady Gaga's early years.
In February 2025, Roan won the Grammy for Best New Artist, delivering an emotional speech that called for better mental health resources and artist support in the music industry. The following month, she released "The Giver," a moody, genre-blending track that unexpectedly topped Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart, further showcasing her versatility.
Roan kicked off her second major tour, "Visions of Damsels & Other Dangerous Things," in June 2025. After a brief mental health break in April and May, she returned to perform at Primavera Sound in Barcelona and announced a series of U.S. pop-up shows for fall 2025, with proceeds supporting trans youth initiatives. With her bold style, heartfelt storytelling, and fierce advocacy, Chappell Roan has solidified her place as one of pop music's most compelling and important new voices.
Music Festivals
On June 9, 2024, Roan announced that she had declined an invitation to perform at the White House during the annual Pride celebration. She explained that issues concerning transgender rights and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict were the reasons he had no interest in taking part in the White House celebration, as she did not believe that liberty, justice, and freedom for all currently existed.
Later that year, Chappell performed at the Governor's Ball Music Festival, the Boston Calling Music Festival, and the Bonnaroo Music Festival in Manchester, Tennessee. Her set had to be moved to a larger performance area to handle the large attendance.
At the 2024 Lollapalooza Festival, Roan performed to an absolutely enormous crowd. Perhaps one of the largest crowds in the history of the festival. And she wasn't even a headliner.
It's Chappell's world and we're just living in it pic.twitter.com/8HbNS2eeYS
— Lollapalooza (@lollapalooza) August 2, 2024
Inspirations
Chappell counts English singer and songwriter Kate Bush among her musical influences, as well as musical performers Stevie Nicks, Lorde, and Lana Del Ray. Her make-up, clothing, and hairstyles, she has explained, are inspired primarily by drag queens and often reference horror movies and burlesque or some other combination of "pretty and scary."
Personal Life
While Chappell has dated both men and women in the past, she has announced that she no longer dates men and identifies strictly as a lesbian.