For 1 million Twitch subscribers , there isn’t a single fixed payout number, but we can ballpark it using current public info on sub pricing and revenue splits.

Quick Scoop

If you had 1,000,000 active paid subs (not just followers), all at standard Tier 1 and on the usual 50/50 split:

  • Typical Tier 1 price (web, US): about 4.99–5.99 USD per month.
  • Typical streamer cut (non‑special contracts): about 50%, or around 2.50–3.00 USD per Tier 1 sub per month.

So, a simple rough estimate:

  • At 2.50 USD per sub:
    • 1,000,000 subs × 2.50 USD ≈ 2,500,000 USD per month before taxes and fees.
  • At 3.00 USD per sub:
    • 1,000,000 subs × 3.00 USD ≈ 3,000,000 USD per month before taxes and fees.

That’s only from paid subs and assumes:

  • All 1M are paying a standard Tier 1 price.
  • Standard 50/50 or similar split, no regional discounts, and no gifted/Prime/sub-variation wrinkles.
  • No extra from ads, Bits, sponsorships, merch, etc., which can also be huge for a channel big enough to maintain 1M active subs.

Mini reality check

In practice:

  • Very few channels ever get near 1M simultaneous paid subs ; usually you hear about that kind of scale on platforms like YouTube memberships or from short-term sub “waves,” not a stable long-term baseline.
  • Real revenue would be a mix of:
    • Tier 1, 2, and 3 subs.
* Prime subs (typically a lower fixed payout per sub).
* Regional pricing, discounted subs, and varied rev‑share contracts (some top creators get closer to a 70/30 split).
* Ads, Bits, donations, sponsors, brand deals, and merch, which can rival or exceed sub money for top streamers.

So the honest, simplified answer people use in forum discussions is:

If they somehow had 1M active Tier 1 subs on a normal split, you’re looking at roughly 2.5–3 million dollars a month just from subs, before any other income or taxes.

Forum-style takeaway

  • 1M followers on Twitch: doesn’t guarantee much money on its own.
  • 1M active paid subs on Twitch: multi-million per month in sub revenue alone under common assumptions.
  • Actual number in the wild: almost certainly lower due to Prime subs, discounts, mix of tiers, and contract differences.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.