Top 20 Micro Influencers in South Dakota (Under 25k Followers) (Jun 2026)

We found 2880 micro Influencers in United States
These influencers have audiences primarily in United States. Here are the top 20. To run a custom search, check out Modash's influencer discovery features (free to try).
06/09/2026
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1. TK

United States

605 | @illinivball #2

Followers
18.6k
Fake followers
9.8%
Engagement rate
7.15%
Average Reel plays
27k
Audience gender
female
64.94%
male
35.06%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by city
Sioux Falls
25.23%
Lincoln
1.6%
Yankton
1.37%
Minneapolis
1.26%
Lawrence
1.14%
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3. Ronna Heaton Gross

United States

Child of God, Wife to @godswrestler133 , Mom to Madden

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4. Kyle Peters

United States

Husband, Father, Cow/Farm Hand, Pilot, Hunter, Country Music Enthusiast, Real Estate Owner, City Councilman & Economic Developer. @southdakota

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5. Lacey Luna

United States

📍𝐁𝐥𝐚𝐜𝐤 𝐇𝐢𝐥𝐥𝐬, 𝐒𝐃 💰 𝐂𝐚𝐬𝐡’𝐬 𝐌𝐨𝐦 🐎 𝐅𝐚𝐬𝐭 𝐇𝐨𝐫𝐬𝐞𝐬 👻 𝐋𝐚𝐜𝐞𝐲.𝐋𝐮𝐧𝐚

Followers
10.3k
Fake followers
10.79%
Engagement rate
10.32%
Average Reel plays
-
Audience gender
female
38.42%
male
61.58%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by city
Rapid City
4.4%
Milwaukee
3.18%
Weatherford
1.71%
Fort Worth
1.71%
New York City
0.98%
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6. Justice Huntington Wedding & Elopement Photog

United States

➺ for the madly, deeply, poetically, in love ➺ creating daydreams 🕊️ 📍badlands ntnl park & the MIDWEST PRESETS → @presetsbyrev

Followers
9.3k
Fake followers
9.64%
Engagement rate
3.87%
Average Reel plays
9k
Audience gender
female
88.14%
male
11.86%
Top performing Reels
  1. 50.4k
  2. 9.5k
  3. 5.6k
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by city
Rapid City
17.24%
Spearfish
3.6%
Sioux Falls
2.25%
Los Angeles
1.2%
Omaha
1.05%
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7. Dane Feldhaus

United States

📍SD/ND 🎥YOUTUBE: Hunting Sodak 📸SNAPCHAT: danefeldhaus 📧BUSINESS: huntingsodak@gmail.com

Followers
8.8k
Fake followers
13.46%
Engagement rate
7.52%
Average Reel plays
8.9k
Audience gender
female
18.25%
male
81.75%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by city
Britton
3.2%
Fargo
0.94%
Sioux Falls
0.66%
Los Angeles
0.66%
Brookings
0.56%
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8. Rob G. Green

United States

Documenting conflict and connectivity across the American West. @insidenatgeo | @ilcp_photographers

Followers
8.8k
Fake followers
10.67%
Engagement rate
9.41%
Average Reel plays
11.6k
Audience gender
female
53.7%
male
46.3%
Top performing Reels
  1. What’s it like to be a grizzly bear in the 21st century? Using some cool technology in some important habitats, we’re looking to find out. The last few months I’ve dug into a documentary project that explores the obstacles grizzlies face as they begin to reestablish their historic ranges across the American West. As places like Montana experience population booms at the same time grizzly populations recover, people and bears collide more often––and it’s almost always the bears that lose out. This project helps people see all the things a bear encounters during its waking months. That means using high resolution camera traps to observe a variety of behaviors as they navigate an increasingly crowded landscape: from natural behaviors like tree rubbing, foraging, and scavenging, to human-influenced behaviors like rummaging through trash cans, crossing high-speed roadways, breaking into structures, and navigating cities. We want to better understand the root causes of these conflicts and what’s being done to meaningfully address them in ways that benefit both people and wildlife. For as much work that lies ahead of us, there’s no way we could do it without great partnerships. A huge thanks to @insidenatgeo for its support and for sharing this behind the scenes update from our current field season, as well as thanks to @montanafilmoffice406, @ilcp_photographers, @vital_ground, and @swanvalley.connections for making this work possible. I feel lucky to work with some of the finest filmmakers in Montana, including @tom_attwater, @jonjohnston_wildlife, and @lanebrownmedia––a top notch crew that teaches me something new every day I’m in the field. For as sweaty, buggy, wet, and sweltering as field work can be, having the right people around makes all the difference. Or at least it gives the mosquitos someone else to chew on for a while.
    51.9k
  2. THE FACE OF FIRE - Part V Dirt and ash paint with a broad brush.   After a few days on the line, soot stops reading as dirt and starts reading as record. It sticks to sweat, dries, then builds again. Eventually you stop noticing the smell, the grime, the way your own face feels unfamiliar.   Whatever vision you have of a hotshot—some hard-drinking, gruff, standoffish adrenaline junkie—they are not that. Or at least not just that. In an era of more persistent and more complex fire behavior, responding to it takes far more than a beard and an ego.   Beneath sweat-crusted Nomex are people who argue the merits of cat videos they saw on TikTok. They knit sweaters in their downtime. They play Magic: The Gathering on improvised tables back at camp. Steel mesh sawyer goggles are stowed in sparkly pink sunglasses cases. You can try to make fun of them for failing to fit into some archetype that makes you feel more comfortable, but chances are they can’t hear you over the sound of a rattling chainsaw.   These are people who resist clean boxes. There are more women on hotshot crews than there has ever been before—a third of the Bitterroot’s 2025 crew. Almost all have college degrees, many have advanced ones. They speak multiple languages. They read books just as well as they read shifting weather patterns. The changing face of fire.   When the packs finally fall to the dust at the end of a shift, the ash smeared across their faces doesn’t hide who they are. If anything it reveals it: They’re worn out. They miss home. They can laugh at the shared exhaustion. Even at a pace that seems superhuman, there are limits to what their bodies can sustain.   But despite gender, education level, age, interests, or stance on cat videos, there is something that binds them together and to the work. I cannot say exactly what that thing is, all I know is that it’s embodied by a ruggedness that doesn’t need to explain itself. It proves itself.
    4.9k
  3. MOVEMENT – Part IV   Trying to keep up with the Bitterroot IHC has been infuriating.   Rarely are they moving along anything that resembles a clear trail, and any dozer line that’s been dug as a firebreak is a lumpy, loose, stump-filled excuse for a footpath. More often than not, it is a battle against your gear at the same time you’re trying to keep an eye on the fire next to you, the widowmakers above you, and the team around you.   To complicate it, Nomex clothing doesn’t breathe, doesn’t stretch. You struggle over a crotch-high downed log looking for solid footing on the other side, and their feet are already three snags ahead of you, boots bounding from one fallen tree to the next as if gliding over deadfall.   I’m convinced the bulk of the job has nothing to do with swamping or felling or digging line, but simply learning how to move efficiently.   And despite that efficiency, nothing feels rushed. Rushed is dangerous. I’ve never seen a hotshot run toward fire or away from it. To spend that kind of energy while carrying a pack, six liters of water, a hand tool or saw, and a fire shelter would mean something had gone wrong, and much attention is given to make sure that wrong has no place on a fireline. What might look like chaos from the outside is the result of coordination and communication grown into muscle memory.   But that’s just getting to the fire.   Once they’re there, it’s the constant swing of the hand tool. The heavy rattle of the chainsaw. The weight of a leaky Dolmar seeping gas down your back. Smoke, heat, blisters, splinters, lost toenails, rashes, bug bites, sunburns, contact burns—friction that accumulates day after day, threatening to slow you down long after your shift is over.   Their ability to move through it is why so few people cut it in this line of work. And, hindsight being what it is, probably explains why I’m still only halfway through a valley of blowdown while they’ve nearly cleared the next ridge.
    4.2k
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by city
Sioux Falls
38.31%
Minneapolis
3.1%
Rapid City
2.54%
Brandon
1.97%
Denver
1.83%
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9. Austin Henry

United States

south dakota | oklahoma @ou_baseball christian

Followers
8.1k
Fake followers
12.72%
Engagement rate
20.59%
Average Reel plays
21.9k
Audience gender
female
24.22%
male
75.78%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by city
Sioux Falls
4.24%
Los Angeles
1.59%
Dell Rapids
1.22%
New York City
1.07%
Lincoln
0.9%

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11. Chase Mason

United States

QB life @gojacksfb QB | 2x National Champion | Business Opportunities: glake@dynamicsportgrp.com | @empoweru_sd @4abwell

Followers
6.9k
Fake followers
10.19%
Engagement rate
15.08%
Average Reel plays
42.6k
Audience gender
female
49.55%
male
50.45%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by city
Sioux Falls
11.19%
Vermillion
4.3%
Brookings
3.44%
Viborg
2.58%
Parker
2.58%
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15. Kyah Watson

United States
Followers
6.3k
Fake followers
10.56%
Engagement rate
21.71%
Average Reel plays
20k
Audience gender
female
58.41%
male
41.59%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by city
Rapid City
27.34%
Sioux Falls
5.99%
Vermillion
3.62%
Brookings
1.58%
Pierre
1.38%
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17. Madison Nipe Nordling

United States

♥ south dakota | aesthetic nurse | mom ♥

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18. somer

United States

head coach @solidcore sioux falls personal trainer @fitwithsomer

Followers
6.2k
Fake followers
12.87%
Engagement rate
6.81%
Average Reel plays
6.1k
Audience gender
female
67.62%
male
32.39%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by city
Sioux Falls
21.8%
Vermillion
2.49%
Brookings
1.34%
Los Angeles
1.12%
Tea
1.12%
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19. Cole Feterl

United States

So.Dak📍 Just doing the best I can. Snapchat: colefeterl Photographer📸 Professional life liver Outdoor Enthusiast

Followers
6k
Fake followers
14.56%
Engagement rate
7.12%
Average Reel plays
4.4k
Audience gender
female
50.82%
male
49.18%
Top performing Reels
  1. 2.1k
  2. 1.6k
  3. 1.5k
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by city
Sioux Falls
11.61%
Vermillion
2.6%
Brookings
2.3%
Lennox
1.55%
Tea
1.15%
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20. cayla crystal

United States

༺♰༻ live fast, die young, be wild and have fun

Followers
5.8k
Fake followers
9.9%
Engagement rate
15.97%
Average Reel plays
-
Audience gender
female
43.87%
male
56.13%
Engagement rate benchmark
  • Median
Audience location by city
Rapid City
23.96%
Phoenix
2.42%
Spearfish
2.42%
Los Angeles
2.36%
Scottsdale
1.79%
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