In 2015, when Katy Perry showed up on the front of Forbes in the wake of winning $135 million in one year, she realized she’d picked her place in the pop star atmosphere—and wouldn’t ever need to stress over blurring into obscurity. After three years, Perry has substantiated herself right: She’s the most generously compensated lady in music, pulling in $83 million pretax amid our scoring period.
Taylor Swift positions second with $80 million. The genius songstress quickly vanished from web-based life a year ago before thundering back with the dispatch of new collection Reputation, which sold two million duplicates worldwide in its opening week. The main reason she didn’t guarantee the best spot on this rundown? The greater part of her Reputation Stadium Tour dates fell simply outside the current year’s scoring period.
Beyoncé adjusts the best three, pulling in $60 million. After she and spouse Jay-Z invited twins Rumi and Sir to the family in June 2017, Queen Bey had a calm year, by all accounts, until conveying a notable exhibition at Coachella this spring and dropping a joint collection with Jay-Z in June.
Below is the list of the highest paid women in music.