Quick Takeaways
- Substack's 10% revenue cut hurts at scale — beehiiv's 0% fee model is a serious alternative for serious newsletter businesses
- Kit's Creator Network (50,000+ creators) is one of the best free subscriber-growth tools available right now
- Paid subscription tiers — not ads — are the dominant monetization model among top earners in the creator economy
- You don't need a huge audience to monetize; you need the right platform pairing and a clear premium offer
The Platform Landscape Has Matured
Two years ago, "just start a newsletter" felt like generic advice. In 2026, it's a genuine business strategy — if you pick your stack wisely.
The three platforms dominating the conversation are Substack, Kit (formerly ConvertKit), and beehiiv. Each has a distinct philosophy, and choosing wrong early will cost you either money or momentum.
Substack remains the easiest on-ramp. It handles payments, publishing, and community in one place, and its built-in discovery gives new writers a fighting chance at organic growth. The tradeoff? Substack takes 10% of every paid subscription, plus Stripe processing fees. At $1,000/month in subscriber revenue, that's $100 gone before you see a dollar. At $5,000/month, the math starts to sting.
"For creators serious about turning a newsletter into a business, nothing else comes close to beehiiv right now." — ThatMarketingBuddy, 2026
beehiiv's pitch is simple and effective: 0% platform fee on paid subscriptions, a free plan covering up to 2,500 subscribers with no feature gating, and robust analytics built for growth-focused operators. If you're already generating revenue or expect to cross $500/month soon, the fee delta alone justifies a migration.
Kit sits in a middle lane — it charges 3.5% plus transaction fees on paid newsletters, but it brings something the others don't: a Creator Network with cross-promotion built directly into the product. If subscriber growth is your bottleneck, Kit's recommendation engine is worth the cost.
How to Build a Monetization Tier That Converts
The creators making real money in 2026 aren't choosing between free and paid — they're building a ladder.
- Free content as the funnel — Publish consistently on a free tier to build trust and discoverability. This is your top-of-funnel engine.
- Paid subscriptions as the core offer — Monthly or annual access to premium essays, deep-dives, templates, or community. Price between $5–$15/month for broad appeal; $20–$50/month for niche professional audiences.
- Community or cohort as the premium tier — Platforms like Mighty Networks let you layer a high-ticket membership ($50–$200/month) on top of your newsletter audience for members who want accountability and access.
- Cross-promotion to accelerate growth — Use Kit's Creator Network or Substack's recommendations to trade subscribers with complementary writers. It costs nothing and compounds fast.
The Numbers You Should Know Before Picking a Platform
Fees aren't the only variable. Here's what actually matters when comparing platforms in 2026:
- Kit Free plan: up to 10,000 subscribers, one automation sequence — exceptional value for early-stage builders
- Kit Creator: $33/month (annual) — adds unlimited automations and paid newsletter support
- Substack: free to publish, but 10% of paid revenue is the ongoing cost of convenience
- beehiiv: 0% on paid subs, free up to 2,500 subscribers — best margin preservation at scale
If you're pre-revenue and want simplicity, Substack gets you moving fastest. If you have 1,000+ subscribers and are ready to charge, migrate to beehiiv before you scale. If list growth is your primary constraint, Kit's network effects are worth the fees.
Don't Wait for a Big Audience
One of the most persistent myths in content monetization is that you need thousands of subscribers before charging. The data doesn't support it. Lenny's Newsletter charges $15/month and built a massive business from a focused professional niche. Letters from an American charges $5/month and converts readers through consistency and voice — not volume.
The formula is simpler than most people make it: niche clearly, publish consistently, price for the value you deliver — not the size of your list.
Bottom Line: Pick beehiiv if you're optimizing for margin, Kit if you need subscriber growth, and Substack only if you genuinely want the simplest possible start — then build a paid tier before you think you're ready.