How Patreon Built a Creator Subscription Business
Business Models Explained with Fexingo: Subscription, Marketplace, SaaS, and Service Companies · 2026-06-01 · 10 min
Episode notes
In this episode of Business Models Explained with Fexingo, Lucas and Luna dissect Patreon's subscription model for creators. They start with Patreon's origin in 2013 — founder Jack Conte needed a way to fund his YouTube videos outside ad revenue. The hosts break down the platform's two-tier fee structure: a 5 to 12 percent cut of creator earnings, plus payment processing fees. They explore how Patreon differs from marketplace models like Etsy or Upwork — Patreon doesn't facilitate transactions between creators and fans; instead, it powers recurring payments in exchange for exclusive content. Lucas contrasts Patreon with Substack's newsletter model and OnlyFans' paywall approach, showing how each platform aligns incentives differently. The episode dives into Patreon's biggest challenge: churn. The average creator loses 5 to 7 percent of patrons monthly, so growth must outpace attrition. They also discuss the tension between creative freedom and platform policies, including Patreon's 2021 content moderation overhaul. Luna notes that Patreon's model works best for creators with highly engaged niches — podcasters, artists, writers — rather than mass-market entertainers.