YouTube Membership Take-Home
Web members pay you 70%. iOS members pay you 49%. Find the real number after YouTube’s cut AND the App Store tax.
The membership cut you see isn’t the membership cut you get.
YouTube publishes a simple number: “30% platform fee, creators keep 70%.” That’s true — for members who sign up on the desktop web or a mobile browser. But YouTube’s own mobile app is a different story entirely. When a viewer hits “Join” inside the YouTube iOS or Android app, Apple or Google takes their 30% In-App Purchase fee first, and then YouTube takes 30% of what’s left. You end up with 49 cents on the dollar, not 70.
Most calculators ignore this and quote the flat 70%. The calculator above models the full stack — your mix of web, iOS, and Android sign-ups and the effective take-home. For a creator with 60% of members on mobile apps, that’s roughly a 10-percentage-point difference in what lands in the bank each month. On a channel earning $1,000 monthly gross from memberships, that’s $100 disappearing to a fee creators didn’t know they were paying.
The fix is simple: direct your audience to join via a browser, not the app. A pinned comment, an end card, a Discord link that leads to youtube.com/@yourchannel/join — anything that gets them off the YouTube app and onto a browser for the sign-up. Once they’re members, they can use the app to watch members-only content normally. Only the payment flow needs to happen on web.
Two cuts, compounded.
tier price × members30% of mobile sign-ups30% of what’s leftgross − App Store − YouTube − MCN