Creator

Substack Fee Calculator UK (2026)

Substack takes a flat 10% of paid subscription revenue, plus Stripe processing (~2.9% + £0.30). UK creators see effective rates of ~13-19% depending on tier price — small monthly subs lose more proportionally to the fixed Stripe fee. This calculator shows your real net per pledge.

Last verified: 25 April 2026 Source: Substack support — pricing Next review: 25 October 2026
Inputs
Single subscription price (monthly or annual). The fees scale with this.
Substack is digital-only by default; leave at 0 unless your offering includes physical merchandise.
Substack fees are typically VAT-exempt for UK creators (US-based platform); this toggle has limited effect.
Gross subscription
Substack 10% fee
Stripe processing
Total fees
After fees
Net to creator
Effective fee %
£5 monthly subscription
£5/month sub · No physical merch

£5 × 10% Substack fee = £0.50. Plus Stripe 2.9% + £0.30 = £0.45. Total £0.95 (~19% effective). Net £4.05/month per subscriber. The sub-£10 tier loses disproportionally to Stripe’s £0.30 fixed fee.

£10 monthly subscription
£10/month sub · No physical

£10 × 10% = £1. Plus Stripe £0.59 = £1.59. Net £8.41 (~84% retention). Effective rate drops to 15.9% — the £0.30 Stripe fixed component is a smaller proportion of larger charges.

£50 annual subscription
£50/year annual sub · No physical

£50 × 10% = £5. Plus Stripe £1.75 = £6.75. Net £43.25 (~87% retention). Annual subs minimise the relative impact of fixed fees. Most successful Substack writers convert monthlies to annuals over time for this reason — and to lock in revenue.

Substack’s fee model is straightforward but the maths surprises new creators: the headline 10% rate becomes 13-19% effective once Stripe processing is added. The calculator above shows your real net per subscription for any tier price.

What Substack actually charges

Each paid subscription transaction pays:

  1. Substack platform fee: 10% flat
  2. Stripe payment processing: 2.9% + £0.30 (UK card rate)
  3. Currency conversion (if subscriber pays in non-GBP): ~2% — not modelled here

For a £5/month subscription: - £5.00 × 10% = £0.50 platform - £5.00 × 2.9% + £0.30 = £0.45 processing - Total: £0.95 (19% of subscription) - Creator net: £4.05/month per subscriber

For a £50/year subscription: - £50.00 × 10% = £5.00 platform - £50.00 × 2.9% + £0.30 = £1.75 processing - Total: £6.75 (13.5% of subscription) - Creator net: £43.25/year per subscriber

Annual subs improve retention AND fee economics. Both are reasons to default to annual-first pricing.

Effective fees by tier price

Monthly tier Total fees Effective %
£3 £0.69 22.9%
£5 £0.95 18.9%
£8 £1.33 16.7%
£10 £1.59 15.9%
£15 £2.24 14.9%
£20 £2.88 14.4%
£50 £6.75 13.5%

The fee-percentage curve flattens above £15. Below £8 the Stripe £0.30 fixed component dominates, making sub-£8 tiers economically inefficient. Don’t price your entry tier below £5; consider £8+ for any tier expected to attract significant volume.

Substack vs Patreon — the fee question

Both charge headline 10% (Patreon Pro), but Substack adds Stripe on top while Patreon’s processing is bundled. Net effective rates are similar (13-19%). Choose based on:

  • Substack: long-form writing audience, native app distribution, recommendations engine, subscriber-only audio podcasting included, simpler tier structure (one paid + one free)
  • Patreon: tier flexibility (multiple paid levels), one-off “tip jar” support, broader content type fit (video, audio, art, code), more mature merchant tooling

For audience fit and content type, the platform choice matters more than the fee delta.

What’s not in this calculator

  • Currency conversion for non-GBP subscribers (~2%)
  • Substack Notes revenue (no direct creator monetisation yet)
  • Tax — see side hustle tax calculator
  • Refund / chargeback impacts on revenue
  • Founding member tiers with one-off premium pricing

For multi-platform creators combining Substack with Patreon, YouTube, and other income streams, the multi-platform tax aggregator handles combined-income view.

Common mistakes
  • Pricing your lowest tier at £3-£4. The Stripe £0.30 fixed fee dominates small charges. £4/month tier loses ~£0.46 to fees per month; on £8/month that drops to ~£0.55 — proportionally much better. Set lowest tier at £8+ for healthier per-charge economics.
  • Forgetting the patron-side currency conversion fee. Subscribers paying in non-GBP currencies (e.g. EUR, AUD) face Stripe’s ~2% currency conversion (passed through). Effectively reduces what the creator sees by another 2% — important for Substack writers with US-heavy audiences.
  • Comparing Substack with Patreon on platform fee alone. Substack 10% vs Patreon Pro 10% looks identical but Patreon doesn’t charge an additional Stripe fee on top — it’s bundled into the platform’s relationship with payment processors. Substack creators pay both, raising effective rate to ~13-19%.
  • Ignoring annual subscription discounts. Substack lets you set annual prices below 12× monthly (e.g. £50/year vs £6/month × 12 = £72). Small discount makes a big difference to retention while reducing per-charge fee proportion. Most successful Substacks offer annuals at 15-25% off monthly.
  • Treating Substack income as different from other self-employment. It’s UK self-employment income — same tax treatment as Etsy, Vinted, YouTube. £1,000 trading allowance applies; above that, Self Assessment. Use the side hustle tax calculator.
What this calculator doesn't cover
  • Doesn’t model Stripe’s ~2% currency conversion fee for non-GBP subscribers.
  • Doesn’t include Substack’s bonus features (Notes, podcasting infrastructure, app distribution) which are creator-side benefits, not direct costs.
  • Doesn’t model VAT — Substack is US-based; UK creators typically see fees as VAT-exempt at point of charge.
  • Doesn’t include Stripe Connect platform fees (Substack absorbs these).
  • Tax not modelled — UK Substack income is self-employment income; see the side hustle tax calculator.

Frequently asked questions

How does Substack compare with Patreon for fees?

Substack is similar headline (10%) but stacks Stripe processing on top, making it ~13-19% effective. Patreon Pro is also 10% headline + Stripe ~13-15% effective. Substack better suits long-form writing audiences; Patreon better suits creators with diverse output (video, podcasts, art) needing tier flexibility. Pick on audience fit, not fees.

Why do small subscriptions lose more to fees proportionally?

Stripe charges 2.9% + £0.30 fixed fee per transaction. The fixed £0.30 hits all charges equally, so as a percentage it’s larger on small charges. £3 tier: £0.30 = 10% of charge. £30 tier: £0.30 = 1% of charge. Higher tiers are more efficient on the fee front.

Can I avoid the 10% Substack fee?

Only by leaving Substack. The 10% is the platform’s primary monetisation. Some creators move to self-hosted Ghost or paid newsletter via Beehiiv to escape the fee — but lose Substack’s recommendations engine, app distribution, and writer network in the process. Cost-benefit varies by audience size.

Do Substack earnings get reported to HMRC?

Yes once you cross £1,700/year of payouts or 30 transactions. Substack reports under Digital Platform Reporting rules. Reporting is administrative — owing tax is separate. See the HMRC reporting checker.

Is Substack income taxable?

Yes, as UK self-employment income. £1,000 trading allowance applies; above that, income tax + Class 4 NI on profits. Stack on PAYE if you have a day job. Use the side hustle tax calculator for the maths.