Who Are the Kalogeras Sisters?
The Kalogeras Sisters — Sunday, Demitra (known as Mia), and Eliana — are three Greek-Canadian sisters from Edmonton, Alberta, who have become one of the most recognisable sibling acts on social media, building a combined following of tens of millions across TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram through lifestyle vlogs, dance videos, cultural content, and the kind of genuine sisterly chemistry that no algorithm can manufacture.
If you’re here for the quick answer: the Kalogeras Sisters are real sisters from a Greek-Mexican family in Edmonton, Canada. They launched their joint YouTube channel in March 2024 and surpassed one billion total views within months — a growth rate that placed them among the fastest-rising content creators in Canadian digital history. Sunday has over 15 million TikTok followers. Their YouTube channel has over 7.6 million subscribers. Their fanbase — known as the Kalogang — is one of the most devoted in the influencer world.
The Sisters at a Glance
| Detail | Sunday Kalogeras | Demitra “Mia” Kalogeras | Eliana Kalogeras |
|---|---|---|---|
| Birth Order | Oldest | Middle | Youngest |
| Known For | Fashion, lifestyle | Cultural content, Greek Traditions series | TikTok energy, spontaneity |
| TikTok Followers | 15M+ | Growing | Growing |
| 5M+ | Significant | Significant | |
| Personality | Polished, fashion-forward | Creative, culturally grounded | Energetic, naturally funny |
| Content Strength | Style, aesthetics | Food, traditions, authenticity | Viral moments, challenges |
Family Background – Greek-Mexican Roots in Edmonton
The sisters were born and raised in Edmonton, Alberta — Canada’s fifth-largest city and one of its most multicultural. Their family background is a genuine blend of cultures: their father John Kalogeras is of Greek heritage and works as a CEO in real estate development, and their mother Patrisha Kalavritinos-Kalogeras is of Mexican and Greek descent, a fashion designer whose creative eye is visible throughout her daughters’ content aesthetic.
Growing up in a household where Greek language, food, music, and tradition were everyday realities — not just holiday novelties — gave the sisters a cultural identity that is genuine rather than performed. Their parents, affectionately known to the Kalogang as Papa and Mama Kalogeras, appear regularly in content and have become beloved figures in their own right.
The family dynamic is central to understanding why the Kalogeras Sisters work. The parents didn’t manage them into fame. They provided a stable, culturally rich home environment where creativity was natural and ambition was supported. Their father’s business background and their mother’s design instincts combined to produce three daughters who understood both the creative and commercial dimensions of building a brand without ever losing the warmth that makes audiences feel like family.
Individual Profiles – Three Distinct Personalities
Sunday Kalogeras – The Anchor
Sunday is the oldest sister and the one most associated with fashion and polished aesthetic. She has the largest individual social media following — over 15 million on TikTok alone, with 5 million on Instagram — and functions as the visual face of the trio’s brand identity.
Her content strength lies in wardrobe and style — she has a dedicated fan page called #sundayswardrobe that tracks her outfits across platforms. But Sunday is considerably more than a fashion account. Her ability to anchor collaborative content — setting the tone, managing energy between her sisters, and keeping extended videos moving naturally — is a production skill that looks effortless and isn’t.
Demitra “Mia” Kalogeras – The Cultural Heart
Mia is the middle sister and the creative engine behind the trio’s most distinctive content. Her Greek Traditions series — cooking traditional Greek dishes, explaining cultural customs, exploring the heritage they grew up with — has become one of the most watched regular content formats on their channel.
What makes the Greek Traditions content work is exactly what makes all good cultural content work: genuine knowledge and genuine love. Mia didn’t research Greek traditions for a content series. She grew up with them. The audience can feel the difference.
She brings an artistic precision to the collaborative content too — the framing of shots, the pacing of vlogs, the decisions about what to include and what to leave out all bear her influence.
Eliana Kalogeras – The Energy
Eliana is the youngest and the one most associated with raw TikTok energy — spontaneous, funny, completely unself-conscious in front of a camera in ways that older, more media-trained creators sometimes lose. Her natural comedic instinct drives the moments in collaborative videos that generate the most social sharing.
She is in a relationship with TikTok creator Noah Risling — the only one of the three sisters with a publicly confirmed romantic relationship, something she handles with appropriate discretion rather than making into content.
The YouTube Launch – From TikTok Stars to Global Creators

The Kalogeras Sisters had been building individual TikTok followings for several years before March 24, 2024 — when they launched their joint YouTube channel and changed the scale of everything.
Their first video — a Crumbl Cookies review — went viral. A simple concept: three sisters trying cookies, reacting honestly, bickering cheerfully, being themselves. It accumulated millions of views in days. The algorithm picked it up. The Kalogang discovered it and shared it. New audiences found it.
The growth from that first video to over one billion total views is one of the more remarkable trajectories in recent YouTube history. For context: most YouTube channels take years to reach 100 million views. The Kalogeras Sisters reached a billion in under twelve months.
What the Crumbl Cookie video demonstrated — and what every subsequent video has reinforced — is that their chemistry is the product. The cookie was incidental. Watching three sisters who genuinely love each other and genuinely make each other laugh is the actual content, regardless of what they’re nominally reviewing, cooking, or visiting.
Content – What They Actually Make
The Kalogeras Sisters’ content spans several distinct categories, each with its own audience and its own purpose.
| Content Type | Platform | What It Is | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lifestyle vlogs | YouTube | Day-in-the-life, travel, family events | Natural chemistry, relatable moments |
| Dance videos | TikTok, YouTube | Synchronised, trending sounds | Technical skill + individual personality |
| Greek Traditions series | YouTube | Cooking, cultural education | Authentic heritage, educational value |
| Sister challenges | YouTube, TikTok | Competitions, dares, games | Comedy, rivalry, resolution |
| Fashion and beauty | Instagram, TikTok | Outfits, styling, beauty routines | Sunday’s aesthetic strength |
| Travel vlogs | YouTube | Family trips, international destinations | Aspiration + relatability |
| Food content | YouTube, TikTok | Restaurant visits, cook-alongs | Universal appeal |
The consistency across these categories is what builds loyalty. The Kalogang knows what they’re getting — warmth, humour, cultural richness, genuine sisterly dynamics — regardless of which specific format they’re watching.
Social Media Numbers – The Scale of What They’ve Built
| Platform | Metric | Figure |
|---|---|---|
| TikTok (Sunday) | Followers | 15M+ |
| TikTok (combined) | Followers | 25M+ estimated |
| YouTube | Subscribers | 7.6M+ |
| YouTube | Total views | 1B+ |
| Instagram (Sunday) | Followers | 5M+ |
| Instagram (combined) | Followers | 8M+ estimated |
| YouTube monthly earnings | Estimated | $16,000–$22,000 |
| YouTube engagement rate | Average | 3.13% (rated “Good”) |
The engagement rate deserves particular attention. A 3.13% engagement rate on a 7.6 million subscriber channel is genuinely strong — it indicates that the audience isn’t just passively subscribed but actively watching, liking, and commenting. Inflated or inactive followings produce engagement rates well below 1%. The Kalogang is real.
The Hollywood Comedy Club Controversy

No honest account of the Kalogeras Sisters’ story can skip this episode — both because it happened and because of what it revealed.
In early 2026, the sisters visited the Hollywood Comedy Club in Los Angeles for an open mic night. What happened next became a significant media story.
The sisters posted a video to their YouTube channel — titled in the “GONE WRONG” format — describing how they felt mistreated by the club’s staff, specifically around expectations about getting stage time during an open mic event. The video was presented from their perspective, with their frustration evident.
The club’s owner, Jiaoying Summers — herself a comedian and social media creator with her own significant following — responded publicly with her own account of events. She described the sisters as having arrived with expectations that didn’t match the open mic format, and outlined the impact of what followed: within hours of the sisters’ video going live, the club was flooded with negative reviews from their fanbase. More seriously, threatening messages were sent to the business.
Summers used the episode to raise a broader question that genuinely matters in the influencer era: what happens to small businesses when large-platform creators post negative content about them, even without explicitly calling for retaliation? The fanbase mobilises automatically. The creators may not intend it. The business gets hit regardless.
The sisters did not explicitly encourage their audience to target the club. But the Kalogang’s response demonstrated the enormous and sometimes uncomfortable power that a 25 million follower platform carries when pointed in any direction.
The episode generated significant discussion about influencer responsibility — and serves as a genuine inflection point in the sisters’ story. How public figures handle their first significant controversy matters. The Kalogeras Sisters have maintained their clean public image through consistency and positivity, and this moment tested that reputation for the first time at scale.
Why They Work – The Secret Nobody Can Copy
The honest answer to why the Kalogeras Sisters have built what they’ve built is one that the content creation industry finds inconvenient because it can’t be replicated or taught.
They are actually sisters.
That sounds obvious. It isn’t. The content space is full of manufactured friend groups, artificial partnerships, and calculated collaborations designed to look like genuine chemistry. The audience — particularly the young female audience that forms the Kalogang’s core — is extraordinarily good at detecting performance. They can tell the difference between two people pretending to know each other and two people who grew up sharing a bedroom.
Sunday, Mia, and Eliana have 20-plus years of shared history in every frame. The way they finish each other’s sentences, the specific way they laugh at each other, the particular dynamics of who defers to whom on different topics — all of it is real, and all of it is visible.
That authenticity, layered over a cultural identity that is equally genuine, produces content that feels like visiting a family rather than watching a production.
Net Worth – What the Numbers Suggest
| Source | Estimated Contribution |
|---|---|
| YouTube ad revenue | $16,000–$22,000/month estimated |
| TikTok Creator Fund and TikTok Series | Significant |
| Brand partnerships and sponsorships | Primary income driver |
| Merchandise | Growing |
| Instagram sponsored content | Significant |
| Combined estimated net worth | $800K–$2 million |
The net worth figure reflects their relative youth and the recency of their channel launch — these are numbers at the beginning of a trajectory, not the end of one. A channel with 7.6 million subscribers, 1 billion views, and a 3.13% engagement rate has considerable brand partnership potential that the current estimates may significantly undervalue.
For context, YouTube channels of comparable size in the lifestyle category typically generate $50,000–$150,000 per sponsored integration. If the Kalogeras Sisters are executing two or three sponsored integrations per month across their content — a conservative estimate for creators at their scale — their annual brand partnership revenue alone could be well into seven figures.
The Kalogang – A Fanbase Worth Understanding
The name the sisters’ community has adopted — the Kalogang — reflects something genuine about the relationship between creator and audience in this case.
The Kalogang doesn’t just watch videos. They create fan pages, translate content for international audiences, defend the sisters from criticism, attend meet-and-greets, and function as an informal marketing operation that amplifies every video within hours of posting.
That kind of fanbase loyalty is built through consistent genuine engagement over time — responding to comments, acknowledging fans by name, creating content that makes individuals feel seen. The Kalogeras Sisters have done all of this with apparent consistency and genuine warmth.
The Hollywood Comedy Club incident demonstrated both the strength and the potential danger of that loyalty. A fanbase that will flood a business with negative reviews without being asked to do so is a fanbase that gives its creators enormous power — power that carries equivalent responsibility.
Conclusion
The Kalogeras Sisters are three sisters from Edmonton who grew up Greek-Canadian in a family that valued creativity, cultural identity, and genuine connection — and who translated those values into a social media presence that has reached hundreds of millions of people.
Sunday, Mia, and Eliana didn’t manufacture their chemistry. They didn’t hire it, script it, or optimise it into existence. They simply showed up as themselves — as sisters who love each other, find each other genuinely funny, are proud of where they came from, and are willing to share all of it with anyone who wants to watch.
A billion YouTube views later, the audience has made clear that they very much want to watch.
The best of the Kalogang’s story almost certainly lies ahead. But what they’ve already built — from a Canadian family home to the global stage, on their own terms, with their own family intact — is already genuinely remarkable.
