Monetization11 min readUpdated June 18, 2026

Streaming Platform Revenue Split 2026: Which Platform Pays Creators the Most?

Quick answer: Kick leads with a 95/5 split — creators keep 95% of every subscription. YouTube and Twitch's Plus tier both pay 70%. Twitch's default is 50%. TikTok is roughly ~50% (often less). Rumble pays 60% on ads, up to 90% on licensing. But the highest percentage doesn't always mean the most money — read on for the full picture.

Streaming platform creator revenue split, 2026Horizontal bar comparison: Kick 95%, YouTube 70%, Twitch Plus 70%, Rumble 60%, Twitch standard 50%, TikTok ~50%.Streaming revenue split 2026What creators actually keep — by platformstreamer.guideKicksubscriptions95%YouTubememberships + Super Chat70%Twitch — Plus tiersubscriptions (300 plus points)70%Rumblead revenue (up to 90% licensing)60%Twitch — standardsubscriptions (default)50%TikTokLIVE gifts (often less in practice)~50%Headline creator share of the listed support mechanism. Figures gross, before taxes and processing fees.Source: platform terms & creator-economy data, 2026.

Revenue split at a glance (2026)

PlatformCreator keepsMechanismSub / unit pricePayout terms
Kick95%Subscriptions$4.99Instant–weekly (Stripe), $10–$50 min
YouTube70%Memberships + Super Chat$4.99–$49.99Monthly via AdSense, $100 min
Twitch Plus70%Subscriptions (300 Plus Points)$4.99 / $9.99 / $24.99Monthly NET-15, $50 min
Rumble60% (up to 90%)Ad revenue / licensingView-basedMonthly via PayPal/bank, $50 min
Twitch standard50%Subscriptions (default)$4.99 / $9.99 / $24.99Monthly NET-15, $50 min
TikTok~50% (often less)LIVE giftsGift/coin basedMonthly, ~$100 min

Headline creator share. Figures gross, before applicable taxes and payment-processing fees. Splits and program thresholds change — verify current terms in your creator dashboard.

What 1,000 subscribers earns you per platform

Assuming 1,000 Tier 1 subscribers at $4.99/month, before taxes:

Kick (95/5)$4,740
Twitch Plus (70/30)$3,500
YouTube memberships (70/30)$3,490
Twitch standard (50/50)$2,500

TikTok and Rumble are not included — they are not subscription-first platforms and income depends on gift volume and ad views respectively.

Platform breakdown

Kick — 95/5

95%

Kick built its entire pitch around money. Creators keep 95% of every subscription, and Kick takes just 5%. On a standard $4.99 sub, that's about $4.74 to the streamer — nearly double Twitch's default payout.

  • One subscription tier at $4.99 — simple math.
  • Tips kept 100% by the creator.
  • KCIP pays qualifying streamers an hourly rate on top of subs.
  • Same-day or weekly payouts via Stripe with low minimums.
  • Multistreaming allowed, but Partner payouts drop 50% during simulcasts.

Kick's ad ecosystem is less developed than Twitch's or YouTube's — revenue leans on subs and tips. See our How to Stream on Kick guide for setup details.

YouTube — 70/30 on memberships & Super Chat

70%

YouTube pays creators 70% on channel memberships, Super Chat, Super Stickers, and Super Thanks, keeping 30%. Memberships range from $4.99 to $49.99/month across tiers.

  • Live ad revenue follows YouTube's 55/45 ad share separately.
  • Full YPP unlocks at 1,000 subscribers + 4,000 watch hours.
  • iOS purchases: Apple's 30% store fee cuts before YouTube's split — effective take ~50–55%.
  • Payouts via AdSense monthly (~21st), $100 minimum.
  • Stacks the most income streams: ads + memberships + Super Chat + Shorts + shopping.

Twitch — 50% default, up to 70% via Plus

50–70%

Twitch's default split is 50/50 for both Affiliates and most Partners. A $4.99 Tier 1 sub returns about $2.50. The path to 70/30 runs through the Plus Program.

Default
50/50
All Affiliates & most Partners
Plus 60/40
100 pts
Held 3 consecutive months
Plus 70/30
300 pts
No $100K cap — removed

Gifted and Prime subs do not count toward Plus Points. Bits pay roughly $1 per 100 cheered. Model your income with our Sub Revenue Calculator and Bits to USD converter.

Rumble — 60% ad revenue, up to 90% licensing

60–90%

Rumble pays 60% of ad revenue as the standard split, with no follower or watch-hour gate to start earning. Exclusive licensing deals can pay up to 90%.

  • Monetize your first upload — no minimum subscriber threshold.
  • Creator Program pays from Rumble Premium's revenue pool.
  • Tips (Rants) and subscriptions support live creators directly.
  • Monthly via PayPal or bank, $50 minimum.
  • Best fit: news, commentary, demonetization insurance.

TikTok — ~50% on LIVE gifts (often less)

~50%

TikTok's nominal split on LIVE gifts is about 50%, but in practice it's often lower. Viewers buy coins, gifts convert to diamonds at a discounted rate, and on mobile Apple/Google take ~30% before TikTok's cut — real take-home frequently lands in the 30–50% range.

TikTok's advantage is discovery, not the split. Most creators use it to grow, then convert that audience into higher-margin income elsewhere.

Headline split vs. real take-home

A higher percentage of a smaller pie can still lose. Four factors determine the real number:

Per-viewer monetization
Twitch and YouTube viewers spend more per head (Bits, multi-tier subs, Super Chat), so 50–70% of higher spending can beat 95% of thinner streams.
Ad maturity
Kick and TikTok have weak ad revenue — creators rely on subs and gifts. YouTube and Twitch diversify income automatically.
Payout speed & reliability
Kick's near-instant Stripe payouts and Rumble's no-minimum entry matter for cash flow. YouTube and Twitch are slower but stable.
Discovery
The best split is worthless without viewers. Twitch and YouTube still win on organic discovery; Kick and Rumble are growing.

Which platform pays the most in 2026?

  • Best raw split:Kick (95/5)
  • Best all-around income stack:YouTube (70% supers + ads + memberships + Shorts)
  • Best at scale / community monetization:Twitch (Bits, ads, 70/30 Plus tier)
  • Best for reach-to-revenue funnels:TikTok (discovery) feeding another platform
  • Best for instant earning & demonetization insurance:Rumble

Frequently asked questions

Which streaming platform has the best revenue split in 2026?

Kick has the highest headline split at 95/5, meaning creators keep 95% of subscription revenue (about $4.74 per $4.99 sub). YouTube and Twitch's Plus tier both pay 70%, while Twitch's default is 50%.

How much does Twitch take from subscriptions?

Twitch takes 50% by default, leaving about $2.50 per $4.99 Tier 1 sub. Plus Program creators can reach 60% at 100 Plus Points or 70% at 300 Plus Points, held three consecutive months.

How much does Kick pay per subscriber?

Kick pays creators about $4.74 per $4.99 subscription — 95% of the sub price. The platform keeps 5%.

What is YouTube's revenue split for live streaming?

YouTube pays 70% of Super Chat, Super Stickers, Super Thanks, and channel membership revenue, keeping 30%. Standard long-form ad revenue is split 55% to the creator.

How much does TikTok take from LIVE gifts?

TikTok's nominal split is about 50% to the creator, but after diamond conversion and mobile app-store fees, real take-home often falls between 30% and 50% of what the viewer spent.

Does Rumble pay more than YouTube?

Rumble's ad split (60%) is higher than YouTube's video ad share (55%), and licensing can reach 90%. But YouTube's larger audience often produces more total revenue for established creators.

Which platform pays out the fastest?

Kick offers same-day to weekly payouts through Stripe with a low threshold. Twitch (NET-15 monthly, $50 min) and YouTube (monthly via AdSense, $100 min) are slower but stable.

Can I use more than one platform at once?

Yes. Multistreaming is common in 2026. Kick allows it with a 50% Partner payout reduction during simulcasts, and creators frequently grow on TikTok or YouTube while monetizing their core community where the split is best.

Sources & methodology

Figures reflect publicly available platform terms and creator-economy reporting current as of June 2026, including each platform's official documentation and help centers (Twitch, Kick, YouTube, TikTok, Rumble) and third-party earnings data (Statista's March 2026 creator revenue-share dataset). Subscription math uses standard Tier 1 pricing; all figures are gross, before applicable taxes and regional payment-processing variations. Splits and program thresholds change frequently — verify current terms in your own creator dashboard before making platform decisions.

Related guides