Kick creators make somewhere between $200 and $10,000+ a month, and the reason the top end is that high comes down to one number: on a $4.99 subscription, you keep about $4.74. Kick takes 5%, you keep 95%, and that split is the whole story behind why streamers keep testing the platform in 2026.
The number that actually matters
Forget the monthly range for a second. The figure that decides your Kick paycheck is what you keep per subscriber, and on the standard $4.99 tier that's about $4.74. Kick keeps a nickel on the dollar.
That's the entire pitch. Run the same $4.99 subscription through Twitch's standard 50/50 split and the creator walks away with roughly $2.50. Same subscriber, same price, nearly double the take-home on Kick. When people say Kick has "the best split in streaming," this is the sentence they mean.
What that looks like in real dollars
Subscriber count is the lever, so let's pull it.
Those come straight off the 95/5 math: about $4.74 per sub, multiplied out. Kick's own framing uses the 100-subscriber case (~$475/month vs ~$250 on Twitch), and third-party trackers land in the same place on the 500-sub example. This is subscription revenue only — tips, ad revenue, and any brand deals stack on top and vary too much to model cleanly.
Where that translates into the platform's listed tiers:
These are ranges, not paychecks anyone is owed. A beginner with a few dozen subs sits at the floor; a mid-tier streamer converting a loyal chat into hundreds of subs climbs fast because every sub keeps 95%. The Kick Creator Program page breaks the tiers and requirements down further.
The multistream trap
Here's where the 95% quietly becomes 47.5%.
The generous split holds on one condition. You have to stream exclusively to Kick. The moment you go live on Kick and another platform at the same time, your Kick revenue drops to 50%. So that streamer pulling ~$2,370/month from 500 exclusive subs would earn roughly half of it on the same subs while multistreaming.
It's not the only way to lose the money. Gambling streams and "Just Sleeping" channels get demonetized outright, and faking viewers or running an incomplete profile can get you rejected before you earn a cent.
See Kick's full pay breakdown — the 95/5 split, every tier, and the multistream rule.
View Kick programWhat you need to unlock each level
Kick gates earnings behind three tiers, and each one asks for more.
- Affiliate — 75 followers, 5 hours of streaming, a phone-verified account with 2FA on, and 2 recent VODs. This is the entry ramp.
- Partner — a real step up: 250 followers, 30 hours streamed in 30 days, 250 unique chatters, 25 active subs, and an average of 75 concurrent viewers.
- KCIP (hourly pay) — a separate track that pays for time streamed rather than subs. It asks for an average of 100 concurrent viewers last month and 50 hours streamed across at least 15 days.
The KCIP track is worth knowing about because it changes the math for consistent streamers. It pays you for showing up, on top of subscription revenue, rather than only when someone subscribes. Kick doesn't publish a fixed dollar-per-hour figure, so treat it as a bonus lane, not a number you can bank in advance.
Kick vs Twitch: the honest read
Per subscriber, Kick wins and it isn't close: $4.74 versus $2.50 on the same $4.99 sub. If you already have an audience that subscribes, moving them to Kick is a straight raise.
The catch is everything around the subscriber. Twitch has the larger audience, the deeper discovery engine, and the habit that viewers already look there. Kick hands you a better split but expects you to bring or build the crowd yourself. The 95/5 rewards streamers who can convert viewers into paying subs, and it does nothing for a big passive audience that never subscribes. If you stream for the platform's ad money or casual reach, the split matters less than it sounds.
If you're weighing Kick against the other live option, does Kick pay streamers covers the head-to-head, and how much does Rumble pay creators lays out the very different ad-revenue model on the other big alt-platform.
Is it worth it?
- Best for
- Streamers who can convert an audience into paying subscribers and stream Kick-exclusive
- Pay model
- $200–$10,000+/month — ~$4.74 kept per $4.99 sub on the 95/5 split
- Access
- Worldwide; tiered (Affiliate → Partner → KCIP)
If your viewers subscribe, Kick's split is the most creator-friendly number in live streaming and the monthly math works in your favor from the first hundred subs. If they don't subscribe — or you multistream and halve the rate — the headline 95% stops meaning much.
Kick sits in Gemlist's video creator category next to platforms that pay on completely different models, so it's worth comparing before you commit your streaming hours. And if you want to see what your own subscriber count could actually pay, run it through the earnings calculator before you build a schedule around the platform.
Get the exact Kick pay numbers before you go live
The 95/5 sub split, every tier from Affiliate to KCIP, and the multistream rule that halves it — laid out in one place on Gemlist.
See Kick's full pay breakdownFrequently asked questions
How much do Kick streamers make per subscriber?
On a standard $4.99 subscription, a Kick streamer keeps about $4.74. Kick takes only 5%, so the split is 95/5 in your favor. That means 100 subscribers earns roughly $475 a month from subs alone, and 500 subscribers lands near $2,370. Compare that to Twitch, where a $4.99 sub on the standard 50/50 split nets the creator about $2.50 — nearly half.
How much can you realistically make on Kick per month?
Gemlist lists Kick's range as $200 to $10,000+ per month: roughly $200–$800 for beginners, $1,000–$5,000 for mid-tier streamers, and $10,000+ for top creators. Those are ranges, not guarantees. Your actual number is driven almost entirely by how many people subscribe, since the 95/5 split only applies to subscription revenue.
Does Kick pay more than Twitch per subscriber?
Per subscriber, yes, and it isn't close. Kick's 95/5 split leaves the creator about $4.74 on a $4.99 sub. Twitch's standard 50/50 split leaves about $2.50 on the same sub. So the same 500-subscriber base is worth roughly $2,370/month on Kick versus about $1,250 on Twitch. Twitch still wins on audience size and discovery, but on the per-sub math Kick is the more generous platform.
How does the Kick multistream penalty affect earnings?
It halves your Kick revenue. The 95% share only holds while you stream exclusively to Kick. The moment you stream to Kick and another platform at the same time, your Kick income drops to 50%. So a streamer earning $2,370/month from 500 subs exclusive would earn roughly half that on the same subs if multistreaming. If Kick monetization is your priority, stream Kick-exclusive.
What do you need to start earning on Kick?
Kick has three tiers. The Affiliate tier needs 75 followers, 5 hours of streaming, a phone-verified account with 2FA on, and 2 recent VODs. The Partner tier needs 250 followers, 30 hours streamed in 30 days, 250 unique chatters, 25 active subs, and an average of 75 concurrent viewers. There's also a separate hourly-pay track (KCIP) that asks for an average of 100 concurrent viewers last month and 50 hours streamed across at least 15 days.
More from Gemlist
TikTok Creator Rewards Requirements 2026: Who Actually Qualifies
TikTok Creator Rewards requirements 2026: 10,000 followers, 100,000 views in 30 days, videos over one minute, and the account rule that quietly disqualifies most people.
How to Join the YouTube Partner Program in 2026 (Both Doors)
How to join the YouTube Partner Program in 2026: 500 subscribers for fan funding, or 1,000 subs + 4,000 watch hours (or 10M Shorts views) for ad revenue.
Facebook Creator Fast Track Requirements 2026: Who Qualifies
Facebook Creator Fast Track requirements 2026: 20K followers on IG/TikTok/YouTube, 4 countries, and one rule that filters most people out. Pay: $100–$3,000/mo.