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Buy Me a Coffee Alternative With a Store & Updates (2026)

Buy Me a Coffee takes 5% and stops at tips. Here's a Buy Me a Coffee alternative that adds a real store, an update feed with product embeds, and just 2% per payment.

July 9, 202610 min de lectura
P
PayRequest Team
Payments Experts

Buy Me a Coffee is a great front door for a first-time supporter: someone likes what you make, clicks a button, and sends you the price of a coffee. It's simple by design, and that simplicity is exactly why it works for tips. The trouble starts once you've built an audience past that first coffee — when you also want to sell an ebook, announce a sale, or tell supporters what's new, and the tip jar has nowhere to put any of that.

This isn't a case against Buy Me a Coffee. It's a look at where a tip-jar platform runs out of road for creators who eventually want to do more than collect tips, and what a platform built around a full creator page — tips, updates, and a real store, together — adds back in.

Key Takeaways

  • Buy Me a Coffee charges 5% of every payment on top of payment processing fees; PayRequest charges 2% per successful payment, capped at €25
  • Buy Me a Coffee is built around a single tip jar — selling a product, a service, or a commission means bolting on another tool
  • PayRequest Posts lets you publish updates, changelogs and sales with one embedded product readers can buy directly from the post
  • Coffee Tips recreates the drinks-menu tip jar creators already know, on the same page as your store
  • Everything — tips, updates, products, bookings, commissions — lives on one payrequest.me page instead of scattered across separate tools
  • Every feature is included free; you only pay when a payment actually succeeds

What Buy Me a Coffee Actually Offers

Buy Me a Coffee earned its popularity by being narrow on purpose. A supporter lands on your page, sees a coffee-cup counter and a short bio, and can send a one-time tip or subscribe to a membership tier in a couple of taps. For a creator whose entire ask is "support what I make," that's close to ideal — there's no friction between showing up and paying.

A Tip Jar, First and Foremost

The core of the product is the button: buy someone a coffee, in any multiple, with an optional message attached. Membership tiers extend that into recurring support, and a basic Posts feature lets creators share text updates with supporters. All of it is built around the same premise — this is a page for receiving support, not a page for running a shop.

Where the Product Stops

That focus becomes a limitation the moment "support what I make" turns into "buy the thing I made." There's no proper catalog for multiple digital products at different prices, no way to embed a live product inside an update so someone can buy without leaving the post, and no invoicing for anyone who wants to bill a client rather than collect a tip. Creators who hit this wall usually end up running two or three tools side by side — Buy Me a Coffee for tips, something else for products, a third thing for invoices — because no single one of them was built to hold all of it.

Where It Runs Out for Growing Creators

The gap isn't a missing feature so much as a missing shape: Buy Me a Coffee was designed around one action (tip me), and every other use case gets forced into that same narrow frame.

One Page, One Job

A tip jar page can't easily become a store page. If you start selling a preset pack, a template, or a one-off commission, you're either awkwardly repurposing the tip button or sending people off-platform to a separate shop link — which means splitting your audience's attention and your own admin across tools that don't talk to each other.

Updates Without Commerce Attached

Posting an update — "new video is live," "here's what changed this month," "flash sale this weekend" — works fine as a text announcement. What it can't do is let a reader act on it in the same breath. A "flash sale" post with no way to buy from inside the post pushes the actual sale to a separate link, adding a step between someone reading about your offer and someone paying for it.

The Platform Cut Adds Up

Buy Me a Coffee takes 5% of every transaction, on top of whatever Stripe or PayPal charges to move the money. On a modest €1,000 month, that's €50 to the platform before payment processing is even counted — money that comes straight off what a creator keeps, regardless of whether the transaction was a €3 coffee or a €150 commission.

What PayRequest Adds

PayRequest starts from a different premise: a creator's page should hold everything they do — tips, updates, and sales — without asking them to stitch three tools together.

Coffee Tips: The Drinks Menu, Rebuilt

Coffee Tips recreates the exact interaction Buy Me a Coffee supporters already know — a drinks-menu-style tip selector, GIFs, and an auto-filled profile picture for repeat supporters — so switching doesn't mean re-training your audience on a new interface. It's the same simple ask, just living on a page that can also sell something.

Posts: An Update Feed With a Buy Button

Posts publishes News, Update, Changelog, Sale and Membership updates to a dedicated tab on your page, and — unlike a plain text announcement — a post can embed one live product with its price, image and a button to buy. A "flash sale this weekend" post becomes an actual point of sale, not just an announcement that sends readers somewhere else to check out.

A Real Store on the Same Page

Digital products, commissions, bookings and memberships all live in the same store as your tip jar and your posts. A supporter can tip you, read your latest update, and buy your ebook without leaving payrequest.me/yourhandle — three actions that would otherwise need three different tools.

Buy Me a Coffee vs. PayRequest

FeatureBuy Me a CoffeePayRequest
Platform fee5% + processing2%, capped at €25
Tip jarYesYes — Coffee Tips
Update feedBasic text postsPosts, with embedded products
Product embedded in a postNoYes — one product per post
Full digital product storeAdd-on, limitedBuilt in
Commissions & custom workNoYes
BookingsNoYes
Custom domainPaid add-onIncluded
Payment methodsCards, PayPal20+ methods via Stripe, Mollie, PayPal

The pattern across the table is consistent: Buy Me a Coffee does the tip jar well and stops there. PayRequest keeps the tip jar and builds the rest of the page around it.

How It Plays Out for a Real Creator

Picture a digital artist who currently uses Buy Me a Coffee for tips and a separate marketplace listing for finished prints. On PayRequest, the same creator's page carries all three jobs at once: a Coffee Tips button for one-off support, a Posts feed announcing a new print drop with the product embedded directly in that post, and a store listing for the full catalog of past work. A supporter who taps through from social media can tip, read about the new drop, and buy a print in the same visit — no second link, no separate checkout to find.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the best Buy Me a Coffee alternative for creators who sell more than tips?

PayRequest works as a tip jar (Coffee Tips), an update feed (Posts) and a full store for digital products, commissions and bookings — all on one branded page, at 2% per payment capped at €25 versus Buy Me a Coffee's 5%.

Does Buy Me a Coffee charge a platform fee on top of payment processing?

Yes. Buy Me a Coffee takes 5% of every payment, plus whatever Stripe or PayPal charges to process it. PayRequest charges 2% per successful payment, capped at €25, on top of the provider's own rate.

Can I post updates and sell a product in the same post?

With PayRequest Posts, yes — attach one product to a News, Update, Sale or Membership post and readers can view it and buy directly from the update. Buy Me a Coffee's posts aren't built around a live store the same way.

Do I need a separate store on top of my tip jar?

No. PayRequest combines Coffee Tips, Posts and a full store (digital products, commissions, bookings, memberships) on the same payrequest.me page, so supporters can tip, read updates and buy without leaving your profile.

Is switching from Buy Me a Coffee free?

Yes. Every feature is included on PayRequest's Free plan — Coffee Tips, Posts and the full store. You only pay 2% per successful payment, capped at €25, with no monthly subscription.

Bottom Line

Buy Me a Coffee is still a fine way to collect a first tip. The point where it runs out is the same point most growing creators eventually hit: wanting to sell something, announce it properly, and keep all of it — tips included — on one page instead of three. PayRequest keeps the part of Buy Me a Coffee that works and builds a real store and update feed around it, for less of a cut on every payment.

Set up your payrequest.me page free, or see the full Buy Me a Coffee comparison for the complete fee and feature breakdown.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the best Buy Me a Coffee alternative for creators who sell more than tips?

PayRequest works as a tip jar (Coffee Tips), an update feed (Posts) and a full store for digital products, commissions and bookings — all on one branded page, at 2% per payment capped at €25 versus Buy Me a Coffee's 5%.

Does Buy Me a Coffee charge a platform fee on top of payment processing?

Yes. Buy Me a Coffee takes 5% of every payment, plus whatever Stripe or PayPal charges to process it. PayRequest charges 2% per successful payment, capped at €25, on top of the provider's own rate.

Can I post updates and sell a product in the same post?

With PayRequest Posts, yes — attach one product to a News, Update, Sale or Membership post and readers can view it and buy directly from the update. Buy Me a Coffee's posts aren't built around a live store the same way.

Do I need a separate store on top of my tip jar?

No. PayRequest combines Coffee Tips, Posts and a full store (digital products, commissions, bookings, memberships) on the same payrequest.me page, so supporters can tip, read updates and buy without leaving your profile.

Is switching from Buy Me a Coffee free?

Yes. Every feature is included on PayRequest's Free plan — Coffee Tips, Posts and the full store. You only pay 2% per successful payment, capped at €25, with no monthly subscription.

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