I-dle Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia 2026: Quintet’s Million-Seller Year
I-dle Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia 2026 is the latest validation in a year that already had a million-selling EP and a label-driven rebrand to its credit. Forbes named the quintet in the 2026 list’s Entertainment & Sports category, citing the group’s eighth EP “We Are” topping 1 million first-week copies and roughly 7 million monthly Spotify listeners. The selection lands less than a year after the group dropped the parenthetical “(G)” from its name — a clean break that’s now paying off with cross-region recognition.
What I-dle Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia 2026 actually cited

Per Korea Herald’s recognition coverage, Forbes anchored the citation on:
- Category: Entertainment & Sports — one of 10 categories on the 2026 30 Under 30 Asia list
- Eighth EP “We Are”: sold over 1 million copies in its first week — the group’s first million-seller
- Spotify reach: approximately 7 million monthly listeners
- Chart history: “multiple chart-topping albums” across the group’s seven-year career
- Rebrand: dropped “(G)” from name in 2025 — now officially “I-dle”
- Debut year: 2018 under Cube Entertainment
The five members — Miyeon, Minnie, Soyeon, Yuqi, and Shuhua — have stayed intact since debut, which is unusual for a girl group in its eighth year. Soyeon also writes and produces most of the group’s discography, including “We Are,” giving I-dle a self-sufficient creative engine that’s closer to Western band economics than the standard K-pop label-producer model.
Why I-dle Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia 2026 matters in context

Forbes’ Asia list skews toward founders and investors. Entertainment selections are tight — usually 3 to 4 acts per year across all of Asia. K-pop has had inclusions before, but most past picks were soloists (Hwasa, IU) or producers (Bang Si-hyuk, Pdogg). Picking a full group, intact in year eight, is a structural change. It treats I-dle as an enterprise rather than a roster of individuals.
The rebrand timing is also the actual business story. Dropping the “(G)” required relabeling streaming metadata, retail spines, merchandise inventory, and Spotify artist canonicality — the kind of operation that goes wrong in public. I-dle’s pulled it off in roughly nine months without losing chart momentum, and the million-seller EP arrived inside that window. For label peers planning similar identity resets, it’s a working case study.
The Spotify number deserves a second look too. Seven million monthly listeners is in the same band as Stray Kids and aespa — not the chart-leading BLACKPINK/BTS tier, but the next layer down. For a group without consistent English-language singles or a Western-major distribution deal, that’s reach earned through algorithmic placement and catalog depth.
What to track for I-dle Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia 2026 next
- 2026 world tour: I-dle’s “I-CON” tour wraps its second leg in August 2026 — the Forbes nod gives sponsorship and partnership conversations new leverage
- Solo schedules: Soyeon’s producer credits, Yuqi’s solo singles, and Miyeon’s drama OST work all continue under the parent group
- Cube Entertainment relationship: I-dle’s current contract runs through 2027 — renewal discussions become more pointed with the Forbes valuation lens applied
- Comeback timing: Next group release expected Q4 2026; no album title yet
- For new I-dle listeners: Start with “Tomboy” (2022), “Queencard” (2023), and “We Are” (2026) — the through-line is Soyeon’s writing voice
The bottom line
I-dle Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia 2026 is the rare Western-list selection that recognizes a K-pop group as a structurally intact, creator-driven enterprise rather than a label-managed roster. Eighth year, million-seller, 7 million Spotify listeners, clean rebrand — it earns the spot on metrics, not on momentum. Track ongoing I-dle, K-pop list features, and group news in our K-Pop & Drama News section.