Summer House is nominally about a group splitting a Hamptons rental, but several cast members turned the exposure into businesses with real, public numbers.
Reality-TV salaries almost never surface, yet a couple of this cast have put their own income on the record, and one company's funding and revenue are documented in the press. Where a figure is not public, we say so.
Summer House cast net worth, ranked (2026)
| Cast member | Modeled net worth | What sets them apart |
|---|---|---|
| Paige DeSorbo | $3–6M | The Giggly Squad podcast (44 million-plus downloads, a Podcast of the Year win, a national tour), a Daphne loungewear line, and David Yurman and DSW campaigns |
| Kyle Cooke | $1.5–5M | Founder of Loverboy, a brand that reached $38 million and then a cash crunch; his equity swings on which you weight |
| Lindsay Hubbard | $1.5–3.5M | Built and ran Hubb House PR, disclosed $150,000 in influencer income in one filming year, now a Nashville hospitality venture |
| Amanda Batula | $1–3M | Loverboy's design and marketing lead plus her own brand work (household overlaps with Cooke) |
| Carl Radke | $0.6–1.5M | Former Loverboy sales exec, disclosed $70,000 in influencer income, sober-lifestyle ventures |
| Danielle Olivera | $0.5–1.2M | A technology background and a steady roster of brand partnerships |
| Ciara Miller | $0.4–1M | A modeling and nursing background and a growing list of deals |
Want the creator-economy side of the money story? See how the biggest creator fortunes are actually built.
Kyle Cooke and Loverboy: the most documented money in the house
Loverboy, the canned hard-seltzer and cocktail brand Cooke founded in 2018, is the cast's most financially documented venture. It closed a Series A round in April 2022, and public startup databases put total funding somewhere between $3.5 million and $7.66 million. Forbes reported $16 million in 2022 sales and called it a "$38 million brand" by September 2023. The picture since has darkened. Cooke has said publicly that he personally guaranteed a $2.1 million small-business loan and that the company was down to roughly three months of payroll at one point. His net worth turns on how much of that equity holds up against that personal liability, which is why the range is wide, and his ownership percentage has never been disclosed.
Paige DeSorbo: the most durable business without a company
DeSorbo built the cast's steadiest income without owning a company outright. Her Giggly Squad podcast with fellow alum Hannah Berner, launched in 2020, has passed 44 million downloads, won Podcast of the Year at the 2026 iHeartRadio Podcast Awards, and finished a 60-city live tour, which feeds ad sales, ticketing, and merchandise that scale with the audience. She also runs a Daphne loungewear line, published a book, How to Giggle, in 2025, and holds campaigns with David Yurman, Neutrogena, Tresemme, and a DSW collection. Newsweek described her as the higher earner in her since-ended relationship with Southern Charm's Craig Conover. No single deal value is public, so the range reflects the number and scale of her income lines.
Lindsay Hubbard: the cast member who came in with a company
Hubbard left Fingerprint Communications in 2016 to start Hubb House PR, a New York publicity agency she ran through most of her time on the show before winding it down around season eight. Her co-star Carl Radke disclosed on camera that she earned about $150,000 in influencer income during a 2023 filming stretch, more than his own. She has since bought a Nashville home, also branded "Hubb House," to rent out, and moved into a hospitality venture there. Agency revenue was never published.
Amanda Batula and Carl Radke
Batula is Loverboy's creative and marketing lead and Cooke's wife, so her finances overlap with his, and she runs independent brand partnerships alongside that. Radke, a former Loverboy sales executive, put his own influencer income near $70,000 for the 2023 filming year and has moved toward sober-lifestyle content and events since leaving the company. Neither has disclosed a fuller figure.
Danielle Olivera, Ciara Miller, and the newer cast
Olivera has a technology background and a steady stream of brand partnerships. Miller came from modeling and nursing and has built a growing deal roster. The newer additions have short public records. Each range is modeled from documented brand work and tenure.
How we got these numbers
Every figure starts from the record: a company's funding filings and Forbes reporting, two cast members' own disclosed income, a podcast's published download count, and a documented home purchase. Where nothing is public, like Cooke's ownership percentage or most of this cast's agency and brand-deal revenue, we model conservatively rather than invent or borrow a number. No other outlet's net worth figure is ever used as an input. The methodology page lays out every rate, and the calculator runs the same model on any career.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is the richest Summer House cast member?
Modeled, Paige DeSorbo at $3 million to $6 million, on the strength of the Giggly Squad podcast, a loungewear line, a book, and national brand campaigns. Kyle Cooke's ceiling is higher on paper through Loverboy, but his equity is offset by a disclosed $2.1 million personal loan guarantee.
How much is Loverboy worth?
Forbes called it a "$38 million brand" in September 2023 after $16 million in 2022 sales, but Kyle Cooke has since described a cash crunch and a $2.1 million loan he personally guaranteed. His ownership stake has never been disclosed, so we model his share conservatively.
How much do Summer House cast members make?
Reality-TV salaries are not disclosed, but two cast members have gone on record about outside income: Lindsay Hubbard at about $150,000 and Carl Radke at about $70,000 in influencer earnings during the 2023 filming year.
What is Paige DeSorbo's net worth?
Modeled at $3 million to $6 million, built from her Giggly Squad podcast, a Daphne loungewear line, a 2025 book, and campaigns with David Yurman, Neutrogena, and DSW.
