The published web price for 200 Tier 1 gifted subs on Twitch is $998.00; Tier 2 is $1998.00; Tier 3 is $4998.00. The streamer keeps $499.00 (Affiliate / standard Partner 50/50), $598.80 (Plus 60/40), or $698.60 (Plus 70/30) on the Tier 1 path. Mobile in-app prices add ~30% for the Apple / Google store cut.
Cost & payout breakdown
| Tier | Per-sub price | Gifter pays (200 subs) | 50/50 net | 60/40 Plus net | 70/30 Plus net |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 | $4.99 | $998.00 | $499.00 | $598.80 | $698.60 |
| Tier 2 | $9.99 | $1998.00 | $999.00 | $1198.80 | $1398.60 |
| Tier 3 | $24.99 | $4998.00 | $2499.00 | $2998.80 | $3498.60 |
Web prices shown — Twitch mobile (iOS / Android) adds ~30% for the in-app store commission. Regional VAT (EU / UK +~20%, AU / JP +~10%) stacks on top of the web base. Streamer net is uniform worldwide.
How the Plus Program 60/40 and 70/30 splits work
Twitch\'s Partner Plus Program (introduced June 2023, expanded January 2024) lets eligible Affiliates and Partners earn above the 50/50 default. The split tiers are driven by Plus Points, not raw sub count:
- Tier 1 sub = 1 Plus Point
- Tier 2 sub = 2 Plus Points
- Tier 3 sub = 6 Plus Points
- Hold ≥100 Plus Points for 3 consecutive months → 60/40 split
- Hold ≥300 Plus Points for 3 consecutive months → 70/30 split (the original Partner-Plus tier; the 350-PP threshold was lowered to 300 in early 2024)
- The $100K annual cap on the 70/30 split was removed in January 2024
- Gifted subs and Prime subs do NOT contribute to Plus Points — only paid Tier subs from real subscribers do
So a 200-sub gift bomb pays the streamer at whatever split they\'re currently sitting on, but doesn\'t accelerate them toward the 70/30 ladder. The path to 70/30 still requires holding 300 paid (non-Prime, non-gifted) subs for three months in a row — easier said than done at the mid-tier channel scale.
What 200 gifted subs feels like in chat
200-tier gifts are the most photographed bomb size on Twitter / Discord clip culture. They land in the chat with a long Cheermote scroll and contribute meaningfully to a Hype Train without crossing the "stunt territory" threshold. From a viewer-economy perspective 200 Tier 1 gifts at $998-ish is a sustained-supporter price point — the kind of gift a sub-tier-3 patron occasionally drops on a creator they watch nightly. From the streamer's side it's a reliable monthly-payout boost: $499.00 on the 50/50 split or $698.60 on the 70/30 Plus split, before US self-employment tax (~15.3% baseline) eats into the take-home.
Tier 1 vs Tier 2 vs Tier 3 — which to pick for 200 gifts
Across all three tiers the streamer's split-percentage is uniform — 50/50 on the standard split, 60/40 on the 60-Plus tier, 70/30 on the 70-Plus tier. So when you compare $998 for 200 Tier 1 vs $4998 for 200 Tier 3, you're paying 5.0× more for 200 times the unlock weight (sub-emote tier on the recipient side). The dollar-per-streamer-payout efficiency is identical.
Streamrise observation
In the order data Streamrise has accumulated since 2017 across 700K+ Twitch channels, 200-sub gift bombs cluster around three patterns: returning viewer celebrating a streamer hitting a follower milestone, raid-host hand-off goodwill, or sponsor onboarding. The dollar-weight matches the social weight here.
Step-by-step: how to gift 200 subs
- Open the channel's sub menu. Land on the streamer's channel page on Twitch. Click the "Subscribe" button below the player; in the dropdown that opens, click "Gift a Sub" (or the "🎁" icon).
- Pick "Gift 200" or enter 200 as the quantity. Twitch surfaces 1 / 5 / 10 / 25 / 50 / 100 quick-gift options in the dropdown. Pick "200" if it's listed, otherwise type the number into the custom-quantity field. Pick the tier (Tier 1 / 2 / 3) — the $998.00 cost line updates live.
- Pay and broadcast. Confirm payment via Twitch's checkout. The chat shows the bomb event as a sub-train with your username pinned. Recipients are random subscribers from the channel's viewer pool unless you specify recipients individually.
FAQ
How much do 200 gifted subs cost on Twitch?
On the Twitch web purchase 200 Tier 1 gifts cost $998.00, 200 Tier 2 gifts cost $1998.00, and 200 Tier 3 gifts cost $4998.00. Mobile (iOS / Android) buyers pay roughly 30% more because the in-app stores include Apple's and Google's commission. Regional VAT (EU / UK +~20%, AU / JP +~10%, BR varies) stacks on top of the web price. The streamer payout side is uniform worldwide — see the next answer.
How much does the streamer make from 200 gifted Tier 1 subs?
On the standard 50/50 split the streamer nets $499.00. Plus Program qualifiers earn $598.80 on the 60/40 tier or $698.60 on the 70/30 tier. Note that gifted subs themselves do not contribute to the 300-Plus-Point qualification window — Twitch excludes them and Prime subs from PP accumulation. So a 200-sub bomb pays the streamer at whatever split they're already on, but doesn't accelerate them up the Plus ladder.
When does the streamer actually receive the money from 200 gifted subs?
Twitch pays out monthly with a $50 minimum and a NET 15 schedule — so 200 Tier 1 gifts cheered on, say, March 10 settle into the streamer's payout balance for end-of-March accounting and pay out around April 15 (give or take a couple of business days). Below the $50 minimum the balance rolls forward. Payout methods are ACH (US bank), PayPal, wire transfer, or Hyperwallet check in supported regions.
Does the answer change for Tier 2 vs Tier 3 gifts?
The streamer's split percentage stays identical across tiers (50/60/70 percent). The dollar amount scales with the sub price. 200 Tier 2 gifts pay $999.00 on the 50/50 split; 200 Tier 3 gifts pay $2499.00. So Tier 3 nets ~5.0× the streamer dollar of Tier 1, at 5.0× the gifter cost.
Are gifted subs refundable?
Generally no. Twitch's published policy treats gifted subs as final purchases. Exceptions exist for accidental duplicate purchases, fraud / chargebacks, and cases where Twitch's purchase system itself errors. If you bought 200 gifts in error, contact Twitch Support immediately — the older the purchase, the lower the refund probability. Subs that *complete* renewal and then are ended early can be partially refunded but only at Twitch's discretion.
What happens to streamer payout if a viewer chargebacks 200 gifted subs?
The streamer payout is reversed for the chargebacked subs. Twitch debits the next monthly payout by the streamer's share of the original gift. If the chargeback comes after the payout cleared to the streamer's bank, the deduction shifts to the *next* unclosed payout window. Repeated chargebacks against a streamer's channel can also trigger a Twitch fraud-review on the recipient side — though this is rare and reserved for clear fraud patterns, not isolated 200-sub events.
Is gifting 200 subs a tax-deductible business expense?
Generally no — it's a personal entertainment / community-support expense for the gifter and is not deductible. The exception is if the gifter is a business / sponsor running a clearly-documented sponsorship campaign with the streamer (signed agreement, branded promotional language tied to the gift event); then the gift's cost can be deducted as a marketing / promotional expense by the sponsor. This is a US-centric answer; UK / EU / AU rules differ. Consult a tax advisor for your jurisdiction.