To get big Twitch payouts, you have to be among the top 0.01% of streamers
Some of Twitch’s internal records are now public knowledge following a major data breach and the online distribution of documents that, among other things, appear to reveal how much money top streamers earned directly from Twitch streaming over the past two years.
The numbers have not been disputed for the most part, but they don’t necessarily reflect each streamer’s actual total income. From what we’ve heard and our knowledge of Twitch, the unconfirmed figures represent each streamer’s cut of revenue earned from channel subscriptions, in-stream ads, Bits (one-cent tokens viewers can tip streamers with), and possibly Twitch’s built-in “Bounty” system, which connects streamers with sponsorship opportunities. Those are just some of the many ways streamers make money. They can also negotiate their own sponsorships, sell merch, use affiliate links, and so on. This leaked ranking of the top Twitch earners shouldn’t be treated as definitive, then.
The data does at least confirm estimations of how much money a person can make directly from streaming on Twitch, and it’s a lot—although only a tiny percentage of streamers are making ‘quit your job’ money.
According to data pulled from the files by KnowS0mething on Twitter, D&D group Critical Role is the biggest earner on Twitch in the last two years, grossing over $9.5 million from August 2019 to now. The next highest earner is xQc, who made over $8.4 million in the same period. He’s followed by summit1g at $5.8 million, and then Tfue at $5.3 million.
Top 10 Twitch payouts, Aug 2019-Sept 2024 (Unconfirmed)
- CriticalRole $9,626,712
- xQcOW $8,454,427
- summit1g $5,847,541
- Tfue $5,295,582
- NICKMERCS $5,096,642
- ludwig $3,290,777
- TimTheTatman $3,290,133
- Altoar $3,053,839
- auronplay $3,053,341
- LIRIK $2,984,653
The revenue drops off pretty quickly as the list goes on. A longer copy of the unverified list seen by PC Gamer shows that the 100th most successful Twitch streamer makes approximately $400,000 per year from Twitch payouts. At 200th, the yearly gross income is around $270,000. When you get into the 400s, streamers are making less than $150,000 per year from direct Twitch revenue, somewhere in the range of an optometrist. At 1,000th place, a streamer makes around $85,000 per year—what a junior software engineer might make in California, depending on where they’re hired.
According to the US Census Bureau, the median US household income in 2024 was $67,521. To make that much per year on Twitch, assuming you aren’t bringing in money from sources not included in this data, you’d have to be one of Twitch’s top 1,322 streamers right now. There are around 8.8 million active streamers on Twitch (via Twitch Tracker), which means you’d need to be in the top 0.015% of all streamers to make the median US household income from direct Twitch streaming revenue. Some of the streamers at that level are live every day of the week for sessions that last anywhere from 2 to 12 hours.
How Twitch streamers make money
Political commentator HasanAbi, who according to the data has grossed $2,810,480 on Twitch from August 2019 to now, has indicated that his leaked number is more or less accurate. “Cant wait for ppl to be mad at me about my publicly available sub count again,” he wrote on Twitter, referencing an ongoing argument over his income’s compatibility or incompatibility with the political views he expresses. The implication is that his critics could’ve estimated his income before the leak by looking at his subscriber count.
That’s roughly true. Each channel subscriber on Twitch represents at least a $4.99 monthly payment, with a minority of subscribers choosing the $9.99 or $24.99 tiers for extra perks. In most cases, a channel’s subscriber revenue is split 50-50 between the channel owner and Twitch, so multiplying a channel’s estimated subscriber numbers by the subscription prices and then halving the result at least gets you a ballpark answer when all you want to know is, ‘Does this person make enough money to buy a nice house in LA?’
Estimating income based on subscribers should always result in too low of a number, though, because partnered streamers also get a cut of the revenue from ads played during streams and one cent for each Bit gifted by viewers. HasanAbi noted on stream that the leaked numbers represent “pretty much all of the revenue” he makes on Twitch.
For many professional Twitch streamers, however, the leaked data only represents a part of their pre-tax income. They can have special deals with Twitch, and may earn money from sources other than the platform itself.
For example, in the period covered by the leak, the data shows that Ninja made $1,378,791, but his actual income was certainly much higher. Twitch exclusivity deals, such as the one Ninja signed, would be paid out separately, and he could have other custom deals with Twitch. Popular streamers like Ninja may also be paid to run sponsored streams or promote products. They can also make money from off-Twitch gigs. Ninja, Jacksepticeye, Pokimane, DanTDM, and LazarBeam all had cameos in the movie Free Guy, for instance. Meanwhile, Critical Role is at this point a company of over 30 people that publishes games and is producing an animated show funded through Kickstarter.
Niche streamers who aren’t appearing in Ryan Reynolds movies or making TV shows can also earn money from affiliate links, off-Twitch donations (on ko-fi, for example), merch, Patreon, as well as smaller sponsorships from game publishers, hardware makers, chair brands, sellers of caffeinated powders, and other gaming and gaming-adjacent companies.
Many Twitch streamers also stream and post videos on YouTube and other platforms, but you can’t see any of that income in the leaked data. It’s possible that there are streamers whose direct-from-Twitch income is relatively small, but whose earnings from other streaming-related sources put them in the same tax bracket as HasanAbi. (I am not encouraging anyone to quit their day job to find out, though. I’m presently looking for streamers willing to break down their income for future reporting on how much money the average pro makes, and how.)
What sort of streamers make the most money?
One of the top 10 Twitch earners isn’t a big streamer at all. Number eight on the list, Altoar, makes Twitch extensions. Whenever someone spends Bits through Altoar’s Sound Alerts extension on a streamer’s channel, for example, he gets a 20% cut. That arrangement, according to this unconfirmed data, has earned him over $3 million over the past couple years.
With the exception of Critical Role, which is a whole troupe, the rest of the purported top 10 earners on Twitch are individual streamers.
Over a third of the recent games streamed by the top 10 group are shooters, with Call of Duty: Warzone, Apex Legends, and the Battlefield 2042 beta being the most popular. The category with the most overlap, however, is Just Chatting. Only Tfue and Altoar, who is not a streamer, haven’t used it recently. Also played recently by more than one top earner: Roblox and Nickelodeon All-Star Brawl.
On Wednesday, the Black Girl Gamers group, which includes over 180 Twitch streamers, expressed a lack of surprise that the unconfirmed list is primarily made up of white men.
“Viewer count isn’t just achieved in a vacuum,” the group said, “it is affected by endorsements, ranking, exposure, opportunities from brands including the streaming platform itself, algorithmic visibility—there are many variables that affect viewer count over time. Even the games played has an effect but make no mistake race is always a factor.
“…The leak is proof of what we’ve been saying all along regarding the lack of diversity at the top, that’s all.”
Viewer count isn’t just achieved in a vacuum, it is affected by endorsements, ranking, exposure, opportunities from brands including the streaming platform itself, algorithmic visibility, – there are many variables that affect viewer count over time.October 6, 2024
Twitch has recently struggled to combat ‘hate raids’—coordinated stream chat floods of slurs, threats, and other hate speech that frequently target Black streamers—which prompted some Twitch streamers to boycott the platform for a day in September. Shortly after that, we learned that Twitch has sued two individuals (real identities unknown) who it says are dodging its hate raid counter measures by creating “new waves of fake bot accounts designed to harass creators.”
A week ago, Twitch added a new phone-verified chat option to help streamers keep bots out of their chat, and has promised to continue working on ways to combat the raids.
The Twitch breach fallout continues
Until this week, Twitch’s inability to stop hate raiders was the most pressing public criticism it was facing. Now it’s also facing a security breach that would “send a shudder down [the spine of] any hardened infosec professional,” according to ThreatModeler founder and CEO Archie Agarwal. Aside from business information, Twitch source code is also circulating online.
There’s some tentatively comforting news for Twitch users: The company says that it currently sees “no indication that login credentials have been exposed,” although it has reset everyone’s stream keys just in case. Twitch also doesn’t store full credit card numbers, so those can’t have been stolen, it says.
Given that streamer revenue data was part of this cache, though, it feels possible that more information about Twitch’s stars could be revealed in another release of data, or found within the files that have already appeared online. There’s worry that additional leaks could include information more sensitive than estimable revenue figures, which are newsworthy but not dangerous.
“I don’t know what I’m going to need to fucking do to protect myself further,” HasanAbi said on stream. “That’s like, actually terrifying.”
For now, with just revenue data out there, some streamers have brushed off the leak, making jokes and pointing out that it’s easy to guess their Twitch earnings, as HasanAbi has said.
“All of my billions have gone straight back to other twitch hot tub streamers,” wrote streamer TommyInnit, who has made over $1.5 million on Twitch since August 2019 according to the documents. “Dont worry. i stay grounded.”
Twitch’s most recent statement says that the breachers took advantage of “an error in a Twitch server configuration change.” It continues to investigate what was taken and how.
Originally posted 2021-11-11 13:02:11.