Venezuela Fury set to out-earn mum Paris with £15,000-a-week role

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PR experts say teen bride Venezuela Fury could soon out-earn mum Paris thanks to viral wedding videos, Netflix fame and booming social media deals as she rakes in millions of views after her wedding

Teen bride Venezuela Fury may have only just swapped her famous family’s £8million mansion for a static chalet, but experts believe the 16-year-old is on track to out-earn her famous mum.

The daughter of boxing champion Tyson Fury and reality star Paris Fury has become one of Britain’s most talked-about teenagers following her lavish Isle of Man wedding to Noah Price.

And top branding experts have revealed that the global fascination with her marriage, Traveller lifestyle and Netflix fame is transforming the teenager into a money-making machine – who could earn £15,000 a week.

Venezuela’s wedding clips, honeymoon videos and caravan tours have exploded online in recent days. Olivia Bennett, senior PR Director at Go Up, believes the teenager’s earning potential will quickly dwarf her mum’s estimated £4,000 a week income.

READ MORE: Venezuela Fury’s friend spotted selling bridesmaid dress days after weddingREAD MORE: Inside Venezuela Fury’s £30k honeymoon – Champagne, Five Guys and poolside TikToks

Olivia explained that Venezuela is entering what marketers call the “mega influencer” category thanks to her massive engagement levels and growing audience.

“If Paris is making £4,000 a week, Venezuela has the runway to dwarf that very quickly,” she explained.

“Right now, sitting just shy of a million followers on Instagram with explosive TikTok engagement, massively boosted by her wedding content and the upcoming At Home with the Furys Netflix season, she’s entering the Mega-Influencer tier for her demographic.”

The teenager’s online popularity has surged dramatically since her wedding weekend, with clips from the ceremony, honeymoon and caravan life spreading rapidly across TikTok and Instagram.

And according to Olivia, the numbers involved in influencer marketing at that level are staggering.

“For standard sponsored posts, a creator with her specific, highly-engaged British reality TV audience can easily command £2,000 to £5,000 per grid post,” she said.

“On TikTok, where videos can easily go viral, she could be charging £3,000-plus per video package.”

But it is Snapchat, Olivia says, where Venezuela could quietly build her biggest fortune.

“If she’s maximising Snapchat’s creator fund and posting high-volume daily stories, that alone can bring in £5,000 to £10,000 a month in ad revenue share,” she explained.

“Conservatively, she could easily be clearing £10,000 to £15,000 a week if she leans heavily into commercial partnerships.”

Venezuela already had a large fanbase thanks to Netflix reality series At Home with the Furys, but her wedding has pushed her profile to another level entirely.

The glamorous ceremony on the Isle of Man attracted huge attention online, with fans fascinated not only by her age but also by the family’s traveller traditions and extravagant celebrations.

The teenager wore a dramatic fishtail gown with a 50-foot train, while Tyson Fury walked her down the aisle wearing matching sunglasses.

Since then, the fascination has only intensified after Venezuela revealed she and Noah would be living in a static chalet home in Yorkshire rather than a mansion.

Olivia believes that unusual mix of glamour, reality TV fame and traditional traveller culture is exactly what makes Venezuela so commercially valuable.

“Scale-wise, Venezuela is very much an anomaly,” she said. “Most 16-year-old fledgling creators have to grind and grind for years to hit a 50,000-follower baseline. Venezuela is currently sitting pretty at over 750,000 followers on Instagram alone.”

Her move from luxury mansion life into the static home with Noah has become one of the biggest talking points online.

“The fact that she’s moving from an £8million mansion into a static caravan to embrace traditional traveller culture have made her metrics absolutely explode,” Olivia explained.

Unlike many Gen Z influencers who focus purely on beauty or fashion, Venezuela occupies a unique space online that experts believe brands will find extremely lucrative.

Olivia explained: “Compared to other emerging creators, her commercial potential is massive because of her unparalleled curiosity.”

“The data shows her engagement rate right now is vastly higher than traditional influencers of a similar size because she bridges two massive worlds: mainstream British reality TV and traditional traveller culture.

“That dual identity gives her a distinct market corner that some other Gen-Z creators simply cannot replicate.”

With fashion, beauty and lifestyle brands constantly searching for influencers who feel authentic and different from the standard social media mould, Venezuela’s combination of celebrity connections and unconventional lifestyle could prove highly marketable.

And with another season of At Home with the Furys expected to bring even more attention to the family, experts believe her audience could continue growing rapidly over the next year.

Despite the huge money potentially involved, Olivia insists Paris Fury’s most important job right now is not maximising profits, but protecting her teenage daughter.

“Having a parent handle the management of a minor is a standard and highly protective practice in this industry,” she explained.

“We have to remember that behind the viral wedding videos and the massive follower counts, Venezuela is just a young teenager.”

Olivia said Paris acting as a manager gives the family more control over opportunities, schedules and public exposure.

“Paris’s role as a manager is vital because her top priority should be to safeguard Venezuela,” she said. “Her position allows her to vet opportunities through the lens of a protective mother, ensuring her daughter’s mental health, privacy, and childhood boundaries are completely shielded from the pressures of the internet.”

She added that brands often feel more comfortable working with minors when parents are closely involved.

“Additionally, when a major fashion or beauty label sees that a mother is actively safeguarding a minor’s career, it gives them peace of mind,” Olivia explained.

“They know they are working with a responsible adult who keeps the content grounded and secure.”

While Venezuela may eventually move into larger global campaigns and professional agency management as she gets older, Olivia believes keeping everything within the family is currently the safest route.

“Keeping it in the family right now is the healthiest approach,” she said. “It allows her to navigate being a teenager and a young bride safely, while her mum handles the heavy lifting of the online world.”

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READ MORE: Venezuela Fury and husband Noah Price’s sweet on-camera moment before wedding

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