Creator

Patreon Fee Calculator UK (2026)

Patreon's three-tier creator pricing (Lite 8%, Pro 10%, Premium 12%) plus payment processing means UK creators see effective rates of 12-15% depending on plan and charge size. This calculator shows your real net per pledge, factoring in the small-charge processing penalty for sub-£3 tiers.

Last verified: 25 April 2026 Source: Patreon — pricing plans Next review: 25 October 2026
Inputs
Average tier pledge amount, before any fees.
Higher plans unlock more features but take a larger cut. Most active creators are on Pro.
Patreon penalises sub-£3 tiers with a higher payment processing rate. Pricing your lowest tier at £3+ avoids this.
Some Patreon tiers include physical merch. Set to 0 if you don't ship rewards.
Cost of physical merch, printed materials, custom artwork, etc. Most digital-reward tiers have £0 cost.
Patreon doesn't charge UK VAT on its fees, so this toggle has limited effect — included for consistency with other platform fee calcs.
Gross pledge
Patreon platform fee
Payment processing
Total Patreon fees
After Patreon fees
Profit before income tax
Effective fee %
£5 monthly pledge — Pro plan
£5 pledge · Pro plan (10%) · Regular charge · No physical reward

£5 pledge × 10% Pro plan = £0.50 platform fee. Plus 2.9% processing = £0.145. Total £0.65 (~13% effective). Net £4.36 to creator. Across 100 patrons that’s £436/month vs £500 gross.

£3 pledge — Lite plan, sub-£3 small charge penalty
£3 pledge · Lite plan (8%) · Small-charge processing

£3 pledge × 8% Lite plan = £0.24. Plus 5% small-charge processing = £0.15. Total £0.39 (13% effective). Sub-£3 tiers get a worse processing rate; pricing your lowest tier at £3+ avoids this penalty.

£25 monthly pledge — Premium plan
£25 pledge · Premium plan (12%) · Regular charge

£25 × 12% Premium = £3. Plus 2.9% processing = £0.725. Total £3.73 (~15% effective). Premium plan is justified at scale by the analytics and team-account features; not worth it for solo creators with simple tier structures.

Patreon is one of the more transparent creator-economy platforms when it comes to fees: they’re prominently displayed on the pricing page and don’t hide small print. The headline rates are 8% (Lite), 10% (Pro), and 12% (Premium) of pledge value. The catch is that those percentages are additional to payment processing, which depends on the size of the charge.

The calculator above models all three plan tiers and the small-charge processing penalty for sub-£3 pledges.

Three plans, three trade-offs

Lite (8%) — basic creator features only. Single tier, no custom branding, no RSS audio feed, no team accounts. Worth it only for creators with extremely simple “throw me a fiver if you like my stuff” structures.

Pro (10%) — multiple tiers, custom branding, RSS audio for podcasters, member analytics. The plan most active creators want. Two percentage points more than Lite for substantial feature gains.

Premium (12%) — Pro features plus team accounts, advanced analytics, member surveys. Worth the extra 2pp only for creator businesses with employees or collaborators using the same Patreon account, or for creators heavily relying on detailed member analytics for content decisions.

The small-charge penalty

Patreon’s payment processing is two-tier:

  • Charges £3 or more: ~2.9% + £0.30 fixed (regular)
  • Charges under £3: ~5% + £0.10 fixed (small)

The small-charge rate exists because payment processors charge per-transaction fees that hurt small charges disproportionately. £1 pledges aren’t economic at the regular rate, so Patreon negotiated a different (higher percentage, lower fixed) rate for them.

The practical effect: avoid £1 and £2 tiers. Even £2.99 hits the small-charge rate. Set your lowest tier at exactly £3 — it qualifies for the regular processing rate and minimises the percentage hit.

Effective rate including processing

Combined platform-plus-processing rates:

Plan Sub-£3 charge £3+ charge
Lite ~14% ~12%
Pro ~16% ~14%
Premium ~17% ~16%

Higher tiers minimise the processing percentage impact (fixed component spreads over more revenue). Pro on £25 pledges is around 14% effective; Pro on £3 pledges is around 13.5% effective. The tier-vs-rate maths usually wins by encouraging higher tiers, where appropriate.

Patreon vs OnlyFans for fee comparison

Different platforms, different audiences, but on fees alone:

  • Patreon Pro: ~14% effective on £5+ pledges
  • OnlyFans: 20% flat

Patreon is consistently cheaper per pledge. Whether it’s the right platform depends on what you’re creating and who you’re creating for — different audiences expect to support different platforms. Don’t pick on fees alone.

Tax on Patreon income

UK Patreon income is self-employment income. Two thresholds matter:

  1. £1,000 trading allowance — under this you owe no tax. Most micro-creators are here.
  2. Combined PAYE + Patreon profit — once total income passes the £12,570 personal allowance and basic-rate boundaries, income tax kicks in at 20%/40%/45%. The side hustle tax calculator does the maths on your specific situation.

Class 4 NI applies on Patreon profit above £12,570 (combined with other self-employment income). Day-job NI doesn’t reduce this — Class 4 has its own threshold for self-employment.

Patreon will report your earnings to HMRC under the Digital Platform Reporting rules once you cross £1,700 / 30 transactions in a calendar year. Reporting and tax are separate questions; see HMRC reporting checker.

Common mistakes
  • Pricing your lowest tier at £1 or £2. Patreon’s small-charge processing rate (5% + £0.10) hits sub-£3 pledges much harder. £1 pledge: ~17% lost to fees. £3 pledge: ~13% lost. Most creators set their lowest tier at £3 or £5 specifically to avoid this.
  • Confusing creator-side fees with patron-side VAT. UK and EU patrons pay VAT on top of the pledge amount (their charge is higher than your pledge); the VAT goes to authorities, not deducted from your earnings. Patreon’s pricing page sometimes confuses this for creators worried about UK VAT impact.
  • Choosing Pro over Lite without using Pro features. Pro charges 2 percentage points more than Lite. If you’re not using tiers, custom branding, or RSS audio feed, you’re paying for features you don’t use. Lite is fine for simple ‘one tier, just say thank you’ creators.
  • Forgetting the patron-side currency conversion fee. Patrons paying in non-creator currency get charged 2.5% extra. UK creators with US-heavy patron bases see lower per-pledge net (after currency conversion) than the calculator’s same-currency estimate.
  • Missing the ‘monthly billing’ nuance. Patreon switched from per-creation billing to monthly-only billing for new accounts in 2019. Some older accounts still bill per-creation, which compounds the small-charge processing penalty across multiple charges per month.
What this calculator doesn't cover
  • Doesn’t model the patron-side currency conversion fee (2.5% if patron pays in non-creator currency).
  • Doesn’t model team account costs on Premium plan.
  • Doesn’t include withdrawal fees from your Patreon balance to UK bank — typically free via Wise/Stripe but check your specific transfer method.
  • Doesn’t account for refunds, chargebacks, or failed pledges. Pledge attrition rates are typically 5-15% per month for active creator accounts.
  • Tax not modelled — UK Patreon income is self-employment income; see side hustle tax calculator.
  • Patreon’s pricing has changed several times historically (per-creation → monthly, fee restructuring 2024); calculator reflects current 2026 pricing.

Frequently asked questions

Lite vs Pro vs Premium — which plan should I choose?

Most active creators want Pro. Lite is feature-limited (no custom tiers, no RSS audio feed, no custom branding) and only saves 2pp over Pro. Premium adds 2pp and unlocks team accounts and advanced analytics — useful if you’re collaborating with others or running a creator business with employees. The 2pp differences cost real money at volume: 100 patrons × £10/month at 8% vs 10% = £20/month difference.

Why does Patreon charge more for sub-£3 pledges?

Payment processors charge fixed fees per transaction (typically £0.10-£0.30) plus a percentage. On a £1 pledge, the fixed fee is 10-30% of the value before any percentage applies. Patreon’s ‘small charge’ rate (5% + £0.10) approximates the higher relative cost. Avoid the penalty by setting your lowest tier at £3+.

Should I worry about UK VAT on Patreon income?

Probably not, unless your total business turnover (Patreon plus other income streams) crosses £90,000/year. Below that, voluntary VAT registration usually creates more admin than benefit. Patreon collects VAT from EU/UK patrons and remits it directly — your earnings already exclude this.

Are Patreon earnings reported to HMRC?

Yes once you cross £1,700/year of Patreon payouts or 30 transactions. Same Digital Platform Reporting rules as every other UK platform. See HMRC reporting checker for what reporting means (separate from owing tax).

What about taxes on my Patreon income?

UK self-employment income. Above the £1,000 trading allowance, you owe income tax + Class 4 NI on the net (after Patreon fees, after legitimate business expenses). Use the side hustle tax calculator to see what HMRC takes.

How does Patreon compare with OnlyFans economically?

Different audiences and content, but for fee comparison: Patreon takes 8-12% + processing (~13-15% effective). OnlyFans takes 20% flat. Patreon is significantly cheaper per pledge for similar revenue volumes. Choice between them depends entirely on what you’re creating and who your audience is — fee structures alone don’t determine the right platform.