Twitch streamers cannot see a full, precise list of every single person watching, especially if you’re not logged in, but they can see some limited info about logged‑in viewers and overall stats.

Quick Scoop

What streamers can see

  • Total viewer count (how many people are watching right now, not who they are).
  • A “Users in Chat” list showing logged‑in accounts currently connected to the chat (including lurkers who aren’t talking).
  • Basic analytics in their dashboard after the stream, such as average viewers, countries, devices, and watch time, but not a detailed list matching “this person watched at this time.”

What they cannot see

  • Your real identity (name, email, IP, location address) just from you watching their stream.
  • Viewers who are not logged into Twitch (true “anonymous” viewers just count as numbers in the total view count).
  • Private “who you watch” history across Twitch; other users and followers can’t see a feed of what streams you’re currently watching.

If you’re logged in and have the stream open with chat, your username can appear in their chat viewer list or show up in bots/loyalty systems that track hours watched, but this is still limited to your Twitch handle and basic interaction data, not personal details.

Bottom note: Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.