How to start a paid newsletter in 2026
How to start a paid newsletter in 2026: beehiiv vs Substack vs Ghost, the fee math at scale, and how to keep more of every subscription dollar.
If you want to know how to start a paid newsletter in 2026, the short answer is: start on beehiiv if you want the best mix of free growth and zero cut on subscriptions, or Substack if you’d trade a 10% revenue cut for built-in discovery and the simplest possible launch. For full ownership and the lowest long-run fees, Ghost (0% revenue cut, optional self-hosting) wins once you’re earning real money.
The platform you choose decides how much of every subscription dollar you actually keep — and that gap compounds as you grow. A 10% take rate feels trivial at $200/mo in revenue and painful at $10,000/mo. This guide compares the four tools that matter, walks through the fee math at scale, and shows you when it’s worth moving off the easy option.
The four platforms that matter
| Platform | Monthly cost | Cut of paid subs | Built-in discovery | Self-host option | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| beehiiv | Free to 2,500, then ~$42/mo | 0% | Yes (recommendations) | No | Best overall for paid newsletters |
| Substack | $0 | 10% | Yes (network + app) | No | Fastest, simplest launch |
| Kit | Free to 10,000 | 0% (Stripe fees only) | Some (Creator Network) | No | Creators who also run sequences |
| Ghost | From ~$15/mo (or self-host) | 0% | Limited | Yes | Ownership and lowest fees at scale |
beehiiv — the best all-round paid-newsletter platform
beehiiv is where I’d point most people starting a paid newsletter. It’s free up to 2,500 subscribers, takes a 0% cut of your paid subscriptions, and bundles the growth machinery that actually moves the needle: a recommendations network, boosts, an ad network, and native paid subscriptions. Past the free tier, paid plans start around $42/mo — a flat cost, not a percentage, so your margin improves as revenue grows. The trade-off is that you pay that monthly fee even in slow months, and there’s no self-hosting if you want full control.
Substack — the easiest launch, at a 10% price
Substack charges nothing monthly and takes a 10% cut of paid subscriptions (plus Stripe processing). In return you get the simplest possible setup, a built-in app, and a discovery network that can genuinely send you subscribers. It’s the best place to start if you want zero friction and zero risk — you only pay when you earn. The catch is the math at scale: that 10% never goes away, and it’s pure margin you’re handing over once your newsletter is real money. Many creators launch on Substack and migrate later for exactly this reason.
Kit — paid newsletters plus real automation
Kit is free up to 10,000 subscribers and takes 0% of subscriptions (you pay only Stripe’s processing). Its edge is automation: if you want welcome sequences, tagging, and product launches alongside a paid newsletter, Kit does that far better than Substack or beehiiv. It’s less of a pure publishing experience and more of a creator marketing platform, so reach for it when the newsletter is one part of a bigger funnel.
Ghost — ownership and the lowest fees at scale
Ghost takes a 0% revenue cut and gives you the most control. Use Ghost(Pro) hosting from around $15/mo, or self-host the open-source software and pay only your server costs. There’s no marketplace discovery to lean on, and self-hosting means you handle updates and deliverability yourself — so it’s not the easiest day-one choice. But for an established paid newsletter, Ghost keeps the most of every dollar and you own the whole stack.
The fee math at scale
This is the part beginners underweight. Picture a paid newsletter earning $5,000/month in subscription revenue (before payment processing):
- Substack (10% cut): $500/month gone — $6,000 a year.
- beehiiv (~$42/mo flat): about $42/month — roughly $500 a year, regardless of how high revenue climbs.
- Ghost(Pro) (~$15/mo flat) or self-hosted: $15/month or less — and it doesn’t rise with revenue.
At $5,000/mo, Substack costs roughly ten times what beehiiv does and over thirty times what a lean Ghost setup does. The percentage model is generous when you’re earning $100/month and brutal when you’re earning $10,000/month. That’s the whole trade: Substack and the discovery network it buys you are worth most early, when 10% of a small number is a small number — and worth least once you’ve built the audience.
A clean rule of thumb: start on a percentage-cut platform if discovery matters more than margin; move to a flat-fee or self-hosted one once your monthly revenue makes the cut hurt. Run your own numbers — expected subscribers and price point — through our pricing calculator to see where the lines cross for you.
A quick path to launch
- Validate free first. Grow a free list on beehiiv or Kit before you ever charge. Proof of demand beats a perfect paywall.
- Turn on paid when you have a reason to pay. A clear premium tier — bonus issues, archives, community — converts better than a vague “support me.”
- Pick the platform for where you’re headed, not just today. If you expect real revenue, the 0%-cut tools (beehiiv, Ghost, Kit) save you the most.
- Not sure which fits? Run our advisor and it’ll match you from a few answers.
For the wider field of email tools beyond newsletters, see our best email marketing software roundup, or our companion guide on email marketing for beginners.
FAQ
What’s the best platform to start a paid newsletter in 2026? beehiiv for most people — it’s free to 2,500 subscribers, takes a 0% cut of subscriptions, and includes growth tools. Substack is the easiest launch but takes 10% of paid subscriptions, and Ghost is best for ownership and the lowest fees once you’re established.
How much does Substack actually cost? Substack has no monthly fee but takes a 10% cut of all paid subscriptions, plus standard Stripe processing on top. That’s cheap at low revenue and expensive at scale — at $5,000/month in subscriptions it’s $500/month gone, versus a flat ~$42/month on beehiiv.
Can I switch newsletter platforms later without losing subscribers? Usually yes — your subscriber list (emails) and posts can typically be exported and imported elsewhere, which is why many creators start on Substack for the easy launch and move to beehiiv or Ghost once the 10% cut outweighs the discovery benefit. Paid subscriptions take a little more care to migrate through Stripe, but it’s a well-trodden path.
Is Ghost worth it for a paid newsletter? Once you’re earning real money, yes. Ghost takes 0% of revenue and lets you self-host, so it keeps the most of every dollar and gives you full ownership. The downside is no built-in discovery and more setup — so it’s a poor day-one choice but a strong destination as you scale.
Choose for where your revenue is heading: lean on a discovery-rich platform early, then move to a 0%-cut tool when the fee math turns against you. Start with the advisor for a personalized pick, and check the pricing calculator to see exactly what each option costs at your scale.