Convert Twitch bits to dollars for streamers and viewers. See how much streamers earn per bit and what viewers pay to purchase bits in bulk.
Twitch Bits are a virtual currency that viewers use to "cheer" in chat, showing support for streamers. Streamers earn exactly $0.01 per bit, regardless of how much the viewer paid to purchase them. The viewer cost varies — bulk purchases offer discounts, and Twitch keeps the markup as their revenue.
This calculator shows both sides: how much a streamer earns from bits received, and how much viewers pay to purchase bits at various quantities. Understanding the economics helps streamers appreciate the true cost viewers incur and helps viewers choose the most cost-effective purchase option.
Bits are a popular way for viewers to support streamers without the complexity of external donation services. They also trigger on-screen alerts and badge progression, adding a gamification element that encourages spending.
Gamers, streamers, and content creators benefit from precise twitch bits value data when optimizing their setup, planning purchases, or maximizing performance and value. Bookmark this tool and return whenever your hardware, games, or streaming requirements change.
Bits can be a meaningful supplementary income stream. Understanding the conversion rate helps you set bit-triggered actions at appropriate thresholds and appreciate the real value of viewer support. For viewers, knowing the cost per bit helps make informed purchasing decisions. Instant results let you compare different configurations and scenarios quickly, helping you get the best performance and value from your gaming budget.
streamer_earnings = bits × $0.01 viewer_cost_per_bit = package_price / bits_in_package Standard viewer pricing: 100 bits = $1.40 ($0.014/bit) 500 bits = $7.00 ($0.014/bit) 1500 bits = $19.95 ($0.0133/bit) 5000 bits = $64.40 ($0.01288/bit) 10000 bits = $126.00 ($0.0126/bit) 25000 bits = $308.00 ($0.01232/bit)
Result: $50.00 streamer earnings
A streamer who receives 5,000 bits earns 5000 × $0.01 = $50.00. The viewer paid $64.40 to purchase those 5,000 bits. Twitch keeps the $14.40 difference. Larger bit packages give viewers a slightly better rate per bit.
Bits, direct donations, and subscriptions each have pros and cons. Bits are chargeback-proof, integrated with Twitch, and gamified. Donations give more money to the streamer but have chargeback risk. Subs provide recurring revenue and emote access. A healthy income stream uses all three.
Bits typically represent 10-20% of a streamer's total income. They're most common during high-energy moments — exciting gameplay, celebrations, or community events. Setting up engaging bit triggers (sound effects, animations, TTS) can significantly increase bit usage in your channel.
Viewers who buy bits tend to spend more overall because the virtual currency creates a psychological distance from real money. The gamification (cheer badges, emotes, leaderboards) reinforces the behavior. Understanding this helps streamers create ethical, engaging bit experiences.
Exactly $0.01. This is fixed and doesn't vary by tier, partnership status, or volume. 1,000 bits = $10.00, 10,000 bits = $100.00. Simple and predictable.
Twitch adds a markup as their revenue share. Viewers pay $0.012-0.014 per bit depending on the package size. This markup is Twitch's cut — the streamer always receives the full $0.01 per bit.
Yes, Twitch occasionally offers "Watch Ads for Bits" promotions where viewers can watch short ads to earn small amounts of free bits. The availability and quantity vary by region and time.
Direct donations typically give the streamer more money because PayPal/Streamlabs fees are lower than Twitch's bit markup. However, bits can't be charged back (unlike PayPal), and they're integrated into Twitch's ecosystem with badges and emotes.
Yes, bits earnings are included in your regular Twitch payout alongside sub revenue. They appear in your Creator Dashboard revenue breakdown and are paid out on the same schedule.
You can set your minimum alert threshold to any amount in your channel settings. Common values are 1 bit (catch-all), 100 bits ($1), or 500 bits ($5). Lower thresholds encourage more interaction; higher thresholds reduce alert spam.