100 Twitch Bits = $1.00 to the streamer (flat $0.01/Bit, uniform worldwide). Donor cost on the cheapest web pack mix: $1.40 (1× 100-Bit pack). Mobile in-app pricing adds ~30% for the Apple / Google store cut. Streamer payout settles in the next monthly Twitch payout (NET 15 schedule, $50 minimum).
Cheapest pack mix for 100 Bits
| Pack tier | Count | Bits added | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100-Bit pack | 1 | 100 | $1.40 |
| Total | 1 | 100 | $1.40 |
Twitch only sells whole packs, so any residual rounds up to the smallest pack that covers it. Effective rate at 100 Bits: $0.01400/Bit. The streamer always nets $0.01/Bit regardless of which packs the donor bought.
Why donors get cheaper rates on bigger packs
Twitch sells Bit packs at six US base tiers: 100 / 500 / 1,500 / 5,000 / 10,000 / 25,000. Per-Bit cost runs from $0.01400 on the 100-pack to $0.01232 on the 25,000- pack — a 13.6% discount on the largest tier. The reason is fixed payment-processing fees: the same Stripe / Apple / Google interchange charge eats a bigger share of a $1.40 transaction than a $308 transaction. Twitch absorbs those fees on its end and thins its margin on larger packs to keep the per-Bit price competitive. The streamer\'s payout side is unaffected — they always receive $0.01/Bit cheered, no matter which pack the viewer bought.
Pack-tier reference table
| Pack | Donor pays | Streamer receives | Cost per Bit | Twitch margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 100 Bits | $1.40 | $1.00 | $0.01400 | $0.40 |
| 500 Bits | $7.00 | $5.00 | $0.01400 | $2.00 |
| 1,500 Bits | $19.95 | $15.00 | $0.01330 | $4.95 |
| 5,000 Bits | $64.40 | $50.00 | $0.01288 | $14.40 |
| 10,000 Bits | $126.00 | $100.00 | $0.01260 | $26.00 |
| 25,000 Bits | $308.00 | $250.00 | $0.01232 | $58.00 |
What 100 Bits feels like in chat
100-Bit cheers are the bread-and-butter chat-supporter signal: enough to surface a Cheermote animation in chat, contribute to Hype Train progress, and net the streamer a measurable $1.00 without the gifter committing to a recurring sub. Most casual viewers cheer at 100 / 500 / 1,000 Bit increments because that's what Twitch's in-chat picker surfaces by default. The streamer's per-Bit payout is uniform at $0.01 regardless of pack size, so the streamer's economic outcome doesn't depend on how the viewer bought the Bits — only how many they cheered.
Bits vs Subs at this dollar level
By streamer dollar, 100 Bits ($1.00) is roughly equivalent to 0.4 Tier 1 subs on the standard 50/50 split, or 0.3 Tier 1 subs on the 70/30 Plus-Program split. So as a streamer-revenue source, Bits and subs converge on similar dollar figures at matching cheer / sub counts. The gifter side, however, pays differently: Bit packs are one-off purchases at the web price, while subs renew monthly and Twitch keeps a higher percentage of each sub vs each Bit (the Bits payout is flat $0.01/Bit; sub splits range 50/60/70%).
Streamrise observation
Across the 700,000+ Twitch channels Streamrise has supported since 2017, 100-Bit cheers cluster around two patterns: regular community supporters cheering on stream highlights, or new subscribers sending a Bit cheer alongside their first sub event. Both are healthy community-pulse signals.
Step-by-step: how to cheer 100 Bits
- Open the channel's chat input. Land on the streamer's Twitch channel page. Click the Bits icon (lightning-bolt) in the chat input bar, or type "cheer" + the amount as a chat message (e.g. cheer100).
- Pick a Bit-pack mix that totals 100 Bits. If your balance is below 100, Twitch pops a pack-purchase modal. Pick the cheapest combination — typically 1 × 100-Bit pack for 100 Bits. Confirm payment.
- Confirm the cheer. Type your cheer message + amount in the chat input. Twitch deducts 100 Bits from your balance and broadcasts the Cheermote animation in chat. The streamer's payout-balance updates within a few minutes.
Need a custom amount? Use the calculator
For arbitrary Bit amounts (not just 100), the Streamrise Twitch Bits calculator runs the same cheapest-pack solver in your browser. It supports viewer-cost mode, streamer-payout mode, and round-trip mode (USD → Bits), with regional pricing toggles for EU / UK / AU / JP / BR. For broader stream revenue across subs and ads, the stream revenue estimator runs Twitch / Kick / YouTube side-by-side.
FAQ
How much does 100 Bits cost on Twitch?
On the Twitch web checkout the cheapest pack-mix for 100 Bits is $1.40 (1 × 100-Bit pack). Mobile in-app prices add ~30% because the iOS / Android stores keep an additional commission. Regional VAT (EU / UK +~20%, AU / JP +~10%, BR varies) stacks on top. The streamer's $1.00 payout is uniform worldwide.
How much does the streamer earn from a 100-Bit cheer?
Streamer payout is flat $0.01 per Bit regardless of pack size or region. 100 Bits cheered = $1.00 into the streamer's next monthly payout, settling NET 15 (the 15th of the following month) once the balance crosses the $50 minimum. Affiliates and Partners receive the same per-Bit payout — the Plus Program 60/40 / 70/30 splits apply to subscriptions, not to Bits.
Why do bigger Bit packs cost less per Bit?
Twitch absorbs the payment-processing fees (Stripe / PayPal / Apple-Google interchange) on the pack purchase. The fixed-fee component eats a bigger share of a $1.40 transaction than a $308 transaction, so Twitch can afford to thin its margin on larger packs and still net more dollars. The 25,000-Bit pack works out to $0.01232/Bit vs $0.01400/Bit on the 100-pack tier — a 13.6% discount. The streamer payout side ($0.01/Bit) is unchanged.
Does the $1.40 viewer cost differ by country?
Twitch localises Bit-pack pricing per region. The figure shown is the US web base; EU / UK buyers pay roughly +20% (VAT), AU / JP buyers pay +~10% (GST / consumption tax), BR varies +10-15% by state. Mobile in-app stores add ~30% on top of base for Apple / Google's commission. The streamer payout side ($0.01/Bit) is uniform worldwide — the regional markup falls on the viewer's side because that's where the local taxes and processing fees apply.
When does the streamer receive $1.00 from this cheer?
Twitch pays out monthly with a $50 minimum on a NET 15 schedule. Bits cheered between, say, March 1 and March 31 settle into the streamer's end-of-March balance and pay out on or around April 15. Below the $50 minimum the balance rolls forward to the next month. Payment options include ACH (US bank), PayPal, wire transfer, and Hyperwallet check in supported regions.
Does cheering 100 Bits during a Hype Train pay the streamer more?
No — Hype Train context doesn't change the per-Bit payout. The streamer still receives $1.00. What Hype Train cheers do is contribute extra weight toward filling the train's tier bar, so the channel reaches Hype Train tier 5 (and the unlocks attached to it) faster. If you're optimising for streamer payout, Hype Train timing is irrelevant. If you're optimising for community impact, cheering during a Hype Train pushes the channel up the tier ladder.
How does Bit revenue compare to Prime sub revenue at 100 Bits?
Prime subs pay the streamer roughly $1.83-2.50 each (varies by territory; Twitch pays Prime-sub revenue from a separate Amazon-funded pool). $1.00 of Bit revenue is roughly equivalent to 0 Prime subs by streamer dollar — but Prime subs come on a monthly recurring rhythm (each Prime user can sub once per month), while 100 Bits is a single one-off cheer. The dollar floor is similar; the cadence is opposite.