How Patreon's Changes Will Hit Artists and Patrons
Artist funding platform
How Patreon Pledges Worked Before
In the past, Patreon processed payments on the first of every month (with the exception of "charge up front" creators, who initially charged new patrons when they sign up, and on the first of the month thereafter). Some artists also charge per creation, the total costs of which are paid on the first of the month.
If you support, for example, three creators with three $5 pledges every month, that means you're spending $15 per month. Patreon then deducts a 5% service fee, in addition to requisite processing fees, from the pledge. That left creators with fluctuating amounts of monthly revenue, taking anywhere from 85-93% of what they were originally owed.
How Your Payments Toward Creators Will Change
Now, to combat the change in fees that would modify the net income of creators, Patreon is shifting the burden of processing fees on patrons themselves. Creators will be guaranteed 95% of their expected pledge, while patrons pay more to cover the processing fee.
In addition to the service fee, patrons will now be charged monthly on the day they pledged money to a creator (the same way your Netflix subscription you purchased on July 4 renews the fourth of every month instead of the first of every month). If creators charge per creation, patrons will be charged when those creations are made available.
So now, your support of three creators with three $5 pledges every month will cost you $16.49 per month. Not a lot, but enough for some to consider dropping a creator or two from their list of pledges.
Supporting your favorite podcaster with a $10 monthly subscription? You'll be shelling out an additional 2.9% of your designated subscription (in this case, $0.29) as well as a fixed fee of $0.35. It might not be much if you're already donating more than $5 per month to a creator, but patrons supporting multiple creators with
We reached out to Patreon to figure out why the changes were being made and how they would affect both patrons and creators. "We think endlessly about the creator and patron impact for every decision we make," said a Patreon spokesperson. "After running tests with both creators and patrons, we settled on a fee that would impact creators and patrons in the smallest way possible, considering both the amount that patrons pledge and the likelihood that they'll keep supporting their creators on Patreon."
The decision to disproportionately impact patrons donating smaller amounts seems counterintuitive to Patreon's goal of using
As a supporter of five Patreon creators, I can't say I'm pleased with the change myself. While Patreon claims it can't eat the cost of the processing fees with its current 5% cut of pledges, I would imagine that both creators and patrons would understand if the company needed to take a larger cut of each pledge to keep patrons donating at the same price.