How much money is 50,000 subscribers on Twitch?
50,000 subscribers puts a channel in Twitch's top tier, and the sub income matches: roughly $124,750 – $174,650 per month depending on split and tier mix. At this scale nearly every streamer qualifies for the 70% Partner Plus split, and Tier 2/Tier 3 gift subs push the real figure above the all-Tier-1 estimate shown here.
Run your own numbers
The estimate above assumes every subscriber is on the base tier — adjust the mix and split below to match your channel.
Twitch earnings calculator
- Tier 1 subs (50,000 × $4.99 × 50%) $124,750
Subs are the backbone, but bits, hype trains, and ads stack on top — and Prime Gaming subs pay out like Tier 1 without costing your viewers anything extra.
Other Twitch milestones
- 100 subscribers ≈ $250 – $349
- 500 subscribers ≈ $1,248 – $1,747
- 1,000 subscribers ≈ $2,495 – $3,493
- 5,000 subscribers ≈ $12,475 – $17,465
- 10,000 subscribers ≈ $24,950 – $34,930
- 100,000 subscribers ≈ $249,500 – $349,300
Frequently asked questions
How much is 50,000 Twitch subs per month?
Approximately $124,750 – $174,650 per month if they're all Tier 1 ($4.99) subs. On the standard 50/50 split the creator keeps about $2.50 per sub; Partner Plus streamers keep 70%.
What's the Twitch sub split in 2026?
Standard affiliates and partners keep 50% of net sub revenue. Streamers who qualify for Partner Plus keep 70% (up to a revenue cap). Tier 2 and Tier 3 subs ($9.99 and $24.99) follow the same split but pay out proportionally more.
Do bits and ads add much on top of 50,000 subs?
They can. Each bit cheered is worth $0.01 to the creator, and ad revenue runs roughly $3.50–$10.00 CPM before the split. Active chat communities often add 20–40% on top of sub income through bits and hype trains.
Is 50,000 subscribers enough to stream full-time?
At $124,750+ per month from subs alone, many streamers treat this as a livable base, especially with sponsors and donations on top.