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The Group 7 TikTok trend explained

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It’s a new week, which means another TikTok trend has broken containment. This time, it’s all about the not-so-secret Group 7 — a supposedly exclusive club that’s taken over the app and appeared in countless viral videos over the past few days.

So… what exactly is Group 7?

Group 7 explained

Put simply, "Group 7" refers to a TikTok trend started by singer Sophia James while promoting her new single, "So Unfair." Hoping to get as many ears on her song as possible, James uploaded seven nearly identical videos with a simple premise: whichever one appeared on your For You Page determined which "group" you belonged to.


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It began with James sharing her track alongside a parking ticket she’d just received. Over the rest of the day, she posted six more clips, with the seventh and final video — Group 7 — arriving last.

"i hereby declare group 7 is the most elite group," one user commented, racking up nearly 250,000 likes.

That final post quickly blew up, becoming an inside joke among those lucky enough to land in Group 7. Of course, with James’s original video now topping 17 million views and 2.3 million likes, the "exclusive" club isn’t quite as small anymore.

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"I was just trying to promote my song. That's all it was," James told Mashable over email. "But the reason I make and perform music in the first place is to foster community and connect with people, so the way this thing is bringing people together is literally a dream come true."

The trend has since exploded, spawning more than 55,000 videos tagged Group 7 — each with its own spin on the phenomenon. There are dance clips set to so-called "Group 7 anthems," explainer videos where creators declare their own Group 7 allegiance before breaking down the trend, and plenty of rambling monologues from users outlining what they believe are the defining traits of a true Group 7 member.

Of course, with more than 17 million people having seen Sophia James’s original video, it’s safe to say everyone’s in Group 7 by now — or at least pretending to be.


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Like many viral moments before it, the trend fits neatly into a broader TikTok playbook: creators manufacturing “in-groups” to drive engagement and game the algorithm. Think OnlyFans creators posting two versions of the same dance — one wholesome, one risqué — and asking followers which one showed up first on their For You Page. Or the endless power-scaling edits from anime and superhero fans, sorting users into random teams based on their birth month and sparking endless comment-section debates about who would win.

Regardless, James seems thrilled with how her videos — and her single — have taken off on TikTok. As a playful reward for fans, she’s organizing a real-life Group 7meetup, with the first one set for Friday, October 24, in London, England.

"This is the funniest thing I’ve ever seen, and I think you should all meet in real life," reads a note on James’s website.

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