A viewer wants to tip $10 during a stream. Through Twitch Bits, the streamer sees roughly a cent per bit after Twitch's cut — meaning that $10 in bits purchased nets the streamer somewhere around $6-7.70 after Twitch keeps its share. Through a YouTube Super Chat, the platform keeps a flat 30%, so the same $10 nets $7. Through a direct PayPal tip link, the streamer keeps essentially the full amount, minus a small payment-processing fee — no platform revenue share in between.
Streamers have known this for years, which is why "just send it to my PayPal" has been a stream-chat staple long before Bits or Super Chat existed. This guide covers exactly how much Twitch and YouTube actually take from their built-in tipping tools, why a PayPal tip jar avoids that cut entirely, and how to set one up properly instead of just dropping a raw paypal.me link in your bio.
Key Takeaways
- Twitch keeps roughly 23-40% of what viewers pay for Bits — streamers earn a flat $0.01 per bit regardless of what the viewer paid for it
- YouTube Super Chat keeps a flat 30% of every Super Chat, paying creators the remaining 70%
- A Coffee Tips page accepts PayPal directly, with only PayRequest's 2% fee (capped at €25) plus standard payment processing — no platform revenue share
- Viewers don't need a PayPal account specifically — the same tip page also accepts cards, so nobody's excluded
- Donor messages and GIFs work the same way a Buy Me a Coffee-style tip jar does, just with PayPal included as a payment option
What Twitch and YouTube Actually Keep From Tips
It's worth being specific here rather than vaguely gesturing at "platforms take a cut," because the actual numbers are bigger than most viewers realize.
Streamers earn exactly $0.01 per Bit cheered, no matter their affiliate or partner status. The part that surprises people is on the other end: Twitch's markup on Bits purchased by viewers means the platform effectively keeps somewhere in the 23-40% range of what a viewer actually spent to buy those bits. A viewer "spending $10 in Bits" doesn't translate to $10 reaching the streamer — closer to $6-7.70, depending on the exact bundle purchased.
YouTube's split is more straightforward: creators keep 70% of every Super Chat, YouTube keeps 30%. It's a flat, published rate rather than a variable bundle-pricing situation like Bits, but it's still a meaningful chunk disappearing before the money reaches the creator.
Neither Bits nor Super Chat requires a platform cut for money to move from viewer to creator — the cut exists because it's the platform's built-in tool. A direct payment link removes the platform from that specific transaction entirely: the viewer pays, the money goes to the creator's own payment account, and no revenue-share step happens in between.
Setting Up a PayPal Tip Jar the Right Way
A bare paypal.me link works, technically, but a Coffee Tips page is built specifically for this use case — a tip jar with the drinks-menu format viewers already recognize from Buy Me a Coffee, running on PayPal alongside other payment methods.
Create a Coffee Tips page at your payrequest.me handle — this gives you the familiar "buy me a coffee/energy drink/pizza" tiered pricing format, with your own branding instead of a generic PayPal redirect.
PayPal works as one of several payment methods on the same checkout — you're not limited to PayPal-only, which matters because not every viewer has (or wants to use) a PayPal account. Cards, and other methods, are active by default alongside it.
Once live, the link works the same way a Streamlabs or Ko-fi tip link would — drop it in your stream overlay, channel description, or a chat bot command like !tip. Nothing about the viewer-facing experience requires them to already have a Twitch or YouTube account with monetization set up.
Donor Messages and GIFs
Part of what makes Bits and Super Chat sticky for viewers is the on-stream shoutout — a message that shows up when they tip. A Coffee Tips page supports donor messages and GIF attachments at checkout, so that part of the experience isn't lost by moving off-platform; it just needs to be paired with your existing alert-box tool if you want it to trigger an on-screen alert.
Twitch Bits vs. YouTube Super Chat vs. a Direct PayPal Tip Jar
| Method | Platform cut | Creator keeps | Requires platform monetization status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Twitch Bits | ~23-40% | $0.01/bit (effectively 60-77%) | Yes — Affiliate or Partner |
| YouTube Super Chat | 30% | 70% | Yes — monetization enabled |
| PayPal tip jar (Coffee Tips) | 0% platform cut | ~98%, minus payment processing | No |
The gap compounds fast for anyone tipping regularly — a viewer who sends $20/month in Bits over a year hands the platform roughly $46-96 that a direct tip link would have routed straight to the creator instead.
Frequently Asked Questions
Create a Coffee Tips page at payrequest.me — it's a drinks-menu-style tip jar that accepts PayPal alongside cards and crypto, with donor messages and GIFs. Share the link in your stream overlay, bio, or chat command.
Twitch keeps roughly 23-40% of what viewers pay for Bits, and YouTube keeps 30% of every Super Chat. A PayPal tip link routes the payment directly to you — PayRequest charges 2% capped at €25, and PayPal's own processing fee applies on top, but there's no platform revenue share on top of that.
No. A payrequest.me Coffee Tips page accepts PayPal alongside cards and other methods on the same checkout, so viewers without PayPal can still tip with a card.
Coffee Tips supports donor messages and GIFs at checkout. For on-stream alerts, pair it with your existing alert-box tool — the tip jar itself doesn't require Twitch or YouTube's built-in monetization to function.
Streamlabs and StreamElements are alert-box tools that route donations through PayPal or Stripe underneath — a payrequest.me Coffee Tips page is a simpler, dedicated tip page you can set up in minutes, without installing separate streaming software.
Bottom Line
Twitch and YouTube's built-in tipping tools take a real, ongoing cut precisely because they're the platform's own payment rail. A PayPal tip jar sidesteps that by routing the payment directly to you, keeping the familiar tip-jar experience viewers already expect without the 23-40% (Bits) or 30% (Super Chat) disappearing before it reaches you.
Set up your Coffee Tips page and start accepting PayPal tips directly, with none of the built-in platform cut.
