- MrBeast buys Step to teach teens how to save, spend and invest
- Step offers a Visa card and basic banking services with no monthly fees
- Acquisition gives Beast Industries a fintech team and seven million users
Beast Industries has confirmed the acquisition of Step, a financial planning app aimed at young people, adding a regulated money product to its growing list of business ventures.
Beast Industries, controlled by Jimmy Donaldson, better known as MrBeast, the world’s largest YouTuber by subscribers, appears to be expanding its business beyond entertainment and media into financial services.
The deal follows a year of fundraising by Beast Industries, including a $200 million investment from Bitmine Immersion Technologies, a company closely tied to cryptocurrency markets through its Ether holdings.
What Step actually does
Step was founded in 2018 by fintech veterans CJ MacDonald and Alexey Kalinichenko, with a focus on financial literacy for younger users.
The platform is not a licensed bank, but rather relies on a partnership with Evolve Bank & Trust for regulated banking services established in 2022.
Step offers a Visa card plus basic saving, spending, sending, and investing tools with no monthly fees.
Backing from Stripe and major venture capital firms gives the app credibility within fintech circles, regardless of its new owner.
Beast Industries says Step has more than seven million users and an in-house fintech team that aligns with its digital reach and charitable ambitions.
The company already runs Feastables, Beast Philanthropy and Beast Games, all closely tied to Donaldson’s massive online presence, with over 450 million subscribers and billions of monthly views by early 2026.
From a distribution point of view, exposure to a young audience does not pose a problem. Logic suggests that financial tools could evolve quickly with this existing reach.
In a statement Monday to millions of his fans, Mr. Beast explained the reasons for his acquisition and his goal of helping young people become financially literate.
“No one taught me how to invest, build credit, or manage money when I was a kid. That’s exactly why we’re joining forces with Step,” said MrBeast.
“I want to give millions of young people the financial foundation I never had. Lots to share soon.”
While this statement provides some explanation, it does not fully address why a global entertainment brand should mediate the financial behavior of millions of young users.
Step is marketed as a way to quickly develop credit and money habits, which sounds simple but carries regulatory, ethical and trust implications.
“This acquisition allows us to reach our audiences where they are, with practical and technological solutions that can transform their financial futures for the better,” Jeff Housenbold, CEO of Beast Industries, said in a statement.
The app will run under Beast Industries, effectively linking personal finance with a creator-led brand.
As of this writing, there is no information on how much was paid for the app, and no timeline has been provided for operational changes following the acquisition.
Via CNBC
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