Kendrick Lamar has cemented his financial and cultural dominance in hip-hop, topping the genre’s earnings in 2025 and significantly out-earning longtime rival Drake, according to Forbes’ annual list of the world’s highest-paid musicians.
The Compton-born rapper earned an estimated US$109 million in 2025, securing fourth place overall on the Forbes rankings and making him the highest-earning rapper on the list. Drake, by contrast, placed seventh with US$78 million, leaving a striking US$31 million gap between the two artists.
Beyond numbers: a rivalry with consequences
The earnings disparity reflects more than commercial performance. It follows a year dominated by Kendrick Lamar’s highly publicised feud with Drake, which reached its peak with the release of the diss track “Not Like Us.” The song not only topped charts but became a cultural flashpoint, reshaping public perception of both artists.
The feud took a legal turn in January 2025 when Drake filed a defamation lawsuit against Universal Music Group, accusing the label of improperly promoting “Not Like Us” and alleging that the song damaged his reputation and personal safety. In October, a US federal judge dismissed the case, dealing Drake a major legal and public relations setback.
Touring triumph without new releases
Remarkably, Lamar’s financial success came without the release of new solo music in 2025. Instead, his earnings were driven by streaming royalties and the global success of his “Grand National Tour,” which reportedly generated more than US$350 million worldwide.
Industry analysts say the tour’s scale and demand reaffirmed Lamar’s position as a live-performance powerhouse, capable of translating critical acclaim into sustained commercial success.
Drake’s strong numbers, weaker returns
Despite the setback, Drake remains one of the music industry’s biggest earners and was Spotify’s most-streamed artist globally in 2025. However, the Forbes rankings underscore a growing disconnect between streaming dominance and overall earnings, with touring and brand power playing an increasingly decisive role.
The year has been particularly difficult for the Canadian rapper, who also faced scrutiny linked to a RICO case involving streaming fraud allegations connected to Stake, further compounding his challenges.
Global earnings landscape
Forbes’ 2025 list was topped by The Weeknd, who earned US$298 million, followed by Taylor Swift at US$202 million and Beyoncé with US$148 million. Lamar’s fourth-place finish places him ahead of all other rappers, marking a career-defining milestone.
A defining year in hip-hop
For many observers, 2025 will be remembered as the year Kendrick Lamar not only won a lyrical battle but also decisively outperformed his chief rival financially. The combination of cultural influence, touring success and strategic restraint in releases has positioned Lamar at the apex of hip-hop’s commercial hierarchy — a victory that extends well beyond the music itself.
Source: AllHipHop

