Canadian actress Nina Dobrev, best known for her portrayal of Elena Gilbert and her vampire doppelgänger Katherine Pierce in the hit series The Vampire Diaries, has finally revealed the real reason behind her exit at the peak of the show’s success. According to her, long-standing pay inequality with co-stars Ian Somerhalder and Paul Wesley was the deciding factor.
In Samantha Highfill’s book I Was Feeling Epic: An Oral History of The Vampire Diaries, Nina explained that from the very beginning, she and fellow actresses Candice King and Kat Graham were among the lowest-paid cast members. Despite her dual role requiring double the work — memorizing twice the lines, filming longer hours, and embodying two distinct characters — her salary did not reflect the additional workload.
“My contract only stated Elena Gilbert, but I was also playing Katherine Pierce, which meant being on set longer and working twice as hard. I loved playing Katherine, but I wanted fair pay and equal recognition,” Nina shared.
Even after negotiating for raises, the network allegedly refused to match her pay with her male co-leads. The actress recalled that the studio even discouraged writers from using Katherine Pierce’s character to avoid increasing her compensation. Co-creator Julie Plec noted that the situation became so tense that writers were instructed not to include Katherine in storylines.
When conversations began regarding her return for the series finale, Nina insisted on salary parity. “It wasn’t about the money — it was about the principle. I had given my blood, sweat, and tears to the show, and I deserved to be treated equally,” she said.
Her revelation highlights the ongoing issue of gender pay disparity in the entertainment industry, reminding fans that even leading stars often face unequal treatment.

