Creator

xQc says he makes $6,000 a day from Twitch ads

xQc says that every day he goes live on Twitch, he makes $6,000 from ads alone.

During a recent broadcast, he responded to a viewer comment asking him to remove ads by clarifying that he’d lose an objectively astronomical amount of revenue if he complied.

“Bro, do you have any idea how much I’d lose by going live and having no ads?” he said. “Do you have any idea? It’s like $6,000 a day.”

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe

He opened his computer’s calculator and did the math—$6,000 per day times 365 days per year, which comes out to him making roughly $2.2 million annually, just from ads.

 

As Dexerto points out, that $2.2 million figure isn’t truly accurate: xQc doesn’t stream on Twitch every single day, so if he stopped running ads, he would lose less than $2.2 million. But we think there should be more transparency about creator earnings all around, so it’s worth covering what xQc–who’s one of Twitch’s biggest streamers and simultaneously has a $100 million non-exclusive deal with Kick

–says he can rake in per day.

xQc also mentioned that he’s removed some ads, joking that he’s “so charitable and cool.” He said his viewers should only be seeing pre-roll ads, which he can’t get rid of.

“They’re literally Twitch-certified,” he said. “The only way to remove those ads would be to remov emy partnership. So that would mean I wouldn’t have a subscriber button anymore, and then the chat would become complete dogshit. So we’re not doing that.”

While we can’t independently verify that xQc makes $6,000 per day, a Twitch leak in 2021 did show that he made $8.4 million on Twitch in 2019. That number is cumulative, counting everything from ads to channel subscriptions to bits gifted by viewers, so the idea that xQc would make over $2 million a year just from ads isn’t far-fetched.

Share
Published by
James Hale

Recent Posts

Caleb Hammer bets on ownership: Why he launched a streaming app and membership platform with Uscreen

Four years ago, after climbing out of personal debt, Caleb Hammer started posting his flagship…

2 hours ago

Zigazoo and Wheelhouse are building a “launchpad for ambitious young talent”

Through Zigazoo, kids and teens can explore a social media environment that's safe and age-appropriate.…

5 hours ago

‘Subway Takes’ earns Emmy nomination as YouTube’s push (sorta) pays off

The show that uses MetroCards as microphones has earned a nomination at the 2026 Emmy Awards. Subway…

5 hours ago

Can creators like iShowSpeed help YouTube win World Cup broadcast rights?

The bidding war for World Cup broadcast rights is in full swing, and YouTube is in the…

7 hours ago

Top 5 Branded Videos of the Week: A clean sweep from FIFA

'Tis the season for festive holiday beverages, and some of YouTube's biggest channels are raising…

24 hours ago

TikTok’s new ad product helps brands distribute and scale their microdramas

Microdramas aren't just a growing entertainment trend -- the short-form, serialized format is a hit…

1 day ago