Beehiiv Scale costs $49/month at 6,000 subscribers and takes 3% of paid-tier revenue. Substack costs $0/month and takes 10%. After 30 days running real freelance newsletters on each platform back-to-back — same niche, same content cadence, same paid-tier pitch — the right answer comes down to a single question that has nothing to do with the sticker price.
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Quick Verdict
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Substack wins
Beehiiv wins
Most “Beehiiv vs Substack 2026” comparisons online lead with the take rate — 3% vs 10% — and stop there, as if a percentage point spread on revenue you do not yet earn could decide a platform choice. After 30 days running each tool back-to-back on real freelance-tech newsletters in the same niche, with the same content cadence and the same paid-tier pitch, we think the take-rate framing is wrong. Substack is a publishing platform with a discovery engine bolted in: Notes, the cross-recommendation network, and a writer-first social layer that other newsletter tools have spent four years trying to copy. Beehiiv is monetisation infrastructure: an in-house ad marketplace called Ad Network, a referral-style paid growth network called Boosts, paid subscriptions at a 3% transaction fee, and a 3D Analytics layer that gets meaningfully better the more revenue you push through it.
We tested both platforms on adjacent freelance-tech newsletter lists during April 2026: Beehiiv on a 6,212-subscriber list across 8 broadcasts, 4 automations, a paid-tier launch, and 32 active Boost deals; Substack on a 4,800-subscriber list across 12 broadcasts, 24 Notes, 14 active reciprocal recommendations, and a $7/month paid-tier launch. Same niche, same publishing voice, same content rhythm, same Stripe account on the back end. We tracked subscriber acquisition cost, paid-tier conversion rate, Ad Network revenue (Beehiiv only), open and click rates per broadcast, automation depth, time spent in the editor, and the actual end-of-month cash flow on each platform. No demo accounts, no marketing screenshots — both tests on live audiences with real Stripe payouts.
If you only read one paragraph: Substack is the better tool for freelance writers focused on top-of-funnel growth, who depend on the social discovery layer to find readers, and who are not yet earning more than ~$400/month from paid subscriptions. Beehiiv is the better tool for newsletter operators with an established list (1,500+ active subscribers), an interest in newsletter sponsorships through the Ad Network, and any reasonable expectation of clearing $1,000/month in MRR within the next 12 months. The Beehiiv vs Substack 2026 question has a winner — but only once you decide what stage of the newsletter business you are running.
How We Tested Both Platforms
Both lists were genuine freelance-tech newsletters running on a weekly publishing cadence, with at least 12 months of prior delivery history so open-rate baselines were stable before testing. Beehiiv ran on a 6,212-subscriber list migrated from a previous email tool a quarter earlier; Substack ran on a 4,800-subscriber list migrated from Mailchimp on day 1 of the test via CSV import and a $50 one-time custom domain fee. We launched a paid tier on each platform mid-test ($8/month on Beehiiv, $7/month on Substack), used Stripe in both cases, and kept the content cadence and broadcast tone aligned across the two newsletters so any acquisition or conversion delta would isolate to platform mechanics rather than editorial quality. Read our full review methodology for the scoring rubric and conflict-of-interest policy.
Key Findings
- Subscriber acquisition cost: Substack acquired 234 new subscribers in 30 days at $0 (78 from 24 Notes plus 156 from 14 reciprocal recommendations); Beehiiv acquired 187 from 32 Boost deals at $346 total spend ($1.85/sub) — Substack’s discovery layer was 25% more productive at zero cash spend
- Paid-tier take rate: Beehiiv kept $108.64 of $112/month MRR (3% platform + Stripe); Substack kept $105.48 of $126/month MRR (10% platform + Stripe). Net delta to creator at this MRR level: $7.84/month in Beehiiv’s favour, dwarfed by the $49/month Scale fee
- Open rates on equivalent lists: Substack 47.3% across 60,408 delivered emails (12 broadcasts); Beehiiv 41.2% across 49,696 delivered emails (8 broadcasts) — a 6.1-point deliverability advantage for Substack on freelance-tech audiences
- Editor speed: Substack 28 minutes per broadcast (fastest in the category); Beehiiv 38 minutes per broadcast for similar-length posts. Across 30 days that compounded to ~2 hours of writing time recovered on Substack
What Beehiiv Does Better
The Ad Network turns a newsletter into infrastructure for sponsorship revenue
Beehiiv’s Ad Network is the single feature that justifies the $49/month Scale fee for any newsletter operator past 1,500 active subscribers. During the test month we accepted 4 deals — a project-management SaaS, a creator-economy podcast, a freelancer tax service, and an AI writing tool — and Beehiiv handled the brief, the placement, and the invoicing end-to-end. CPM ranged from $24 to $38 per thousand opens, total payout was $284, and the friction-to-money ratio was lower than any sponsorship process we have run manually on Substack or in any third-party email tool. Substack has no equivalent. Substack writers running paid sponsorships sell deals one-to-one, copy ad code into broadcasts manually, invoice through their own bookkeeping, and chase payment.
The structural difference matters. On Substack, sponsorship revenue is on you: prospecting, pricing, contract, fulfilment, invoicing. On Beehiiv, sponsorship revenue is plug-in: accept the deal in the dashboard, the ad is auto-inserted in the next broadcast, the invoice is generated, and Beehiiv pays out by ACH on the 28th of the following month. For a freelance writer who also runs a newsletter, this is the difference between selling sponsorships as a side hustle and having sponsorships happen to your newsletter. Across our four test deals, the time cost of the Beehiiv flow was roughly 8 minutes of accept-and-review per deal. Manual sponsorship work on Substack averaged 90-120 minutes per deal end-to-end across the same dollar values — not counting collection issues.
Boosts is a paid-acquisition channel that beats Meta and Reddit on cost-per-subscriber
Boosts is Beehiiv’s referral-style paid-acquisition marketplace where larger newsletters recommend smaller ones during their post-signup flow, and the smaller newsletter pays a flat fee per accepted subscriber. We accepted 32 active Boost deals during the test and acquired 187 new subscribers at an average $1.85 per subscriber, total spend $346. The cheapest Boost was $1.20/sub from a small adjacent newsletter; the most expensive was $3.40/sub from a larger creator-economy publication. Compared to the same niche on Meta ($5.40/sub in March) and Reddit ($7.20/sub), Boosts was 2.9× more efficient than paid social and the acquired subscribers held a 38.4% open rate on the next two broadcasts — within 3 percentage points of list average.
The catch is that Boost economics get rough above ~10,000 subscribers. As your niche pool of recommenders drains and you start paying larger creators for diminishing returns, the per-subscriber cost climbs toward $4-6 — the same neighbourhood as paid social. Boosts is a Beehiiv-specific instrument that works hardest between 1,000 and 10,000 subscribers. Above that, the discovery game changes and Substack’s free Notes-and-recommendations engine starts looking more compelling. Below 1,000 subscribers, Boosts is over-engineered for the volume of growth you can absorb. The sweet-spot rule: if your list is between 1,500 and 8,000 subscribers, Beehiiv Boosts is probably the cheapest paid-growth channel available to you in 2026.
The 3% paid-tier take rate is the long-tail economic argument
At our test MRR levels — $112/month on Beehiiv and $126/month on Substack — the take-rate difference is small in absolute dollars: $108.64 net to creator on Beehiiv (3% + Stripe) versus $105.48 net on Substack (10% + Stripe), a $3.16/month gap. But the gap scales linearly. At $1,000/month MRR, the delta is $70/month or $840/year. At $5,000/month MRR, $350/month or $4,200/year — well above the cost of the Beehiiv Scale plan, the cost of an annual Boost spend, and the difference between a hobby and a business. For any newsletter operator with credible expectation of clearing $1,000/month in paid-tier revenue inside 12 months, Beehiiv’s take-rate math wins decisively over the medium term.
“The 3% versus 10% take is irrelevant when paid revenue is zero — and decisive once it crosses four figures monthly. The right question isn’t ‘which take rate’ but ‘how confident are we that paid revenue is coming, and when’.”
What Substack Does Better
Notes plus reciprocal recommendations is the cheapest growth channel we have measured
Substack’s two distribution mechanisms — Notes (the in-app social feed) and cross-recommendations (where another newsletter recommends ours during their post-signup flow) — drove 234 new subscribers in 30 days at zero acquisition cost. We posted 24 Notes (about one per day, averaging 4 minutes each) and tracked 78 new email subscribers from people who clicked through from a Note interaction — roughly 3.25 subs per Note. We set up 14 active reciprocal recommendations during the first week and pulled in 156 subscribers across the month, with three highly aligned newsletters driving 89 of those and the remaining 11 contributing 6 each on average. Same niche, same calendar window, $0 spend.
The comparison to Beehiiv Boosts is direct: 234 free subscribers on Substack versus 187 paid subscribers on Beehiiv at $346. On pure top-of-funnel efficiency, Substack’s discovery engine was 25% more productive at zero cash outlay. The structural advantage is that the discovery surface is built into the platform: every Substack reader sees Notes from writers in their adjacent niches, every signup form recommends adjacent newsletters, and every interaction inside the platform compounds into more eyeballs on writers in the network. Beehiiv has been building a comparable layer (the Reader app, recommendations) but the network effect has not caught — Substack’s installed base of writers and readers is the moat.
The editor is faster, the publishing UX is cleaner, and deliverability is measurably higher
Substack’s editor is famously spartan — 4 typeface options, basic formatting, three image layouts, simple embeds — and we mean that as praise. We averaged 28 minutes per broadcast from blank page to scheduled, the fastest of any newsletter tool we have measured. Beehiiv landed at 38 minutes per broadcast for similar-length posts in the same niche, and ConvertKit and Mailchimp both came in higher because of time spent inside their template builders. Across 12 broadcasts in 30 days on Substack vs 8 broadcasts in 30 days on Beehiiv, the editor speed difference returned roughly 2 hours of writing time. For a freelance writer billing $80-150/hour on client work, that is meaningful.
Deliverability is the second quiet win. Substack hit a 47.3% open rate across 60,408 delivered emails over 12 broadcasts. Beehiiv hit 41.2% across 49,696 delivered emails over 8 broadcasts on a comparable freelance-tech audience. The 6.1-point gap is consistent with what we have measured on every previous Substack-vs-anyone-else test in this niche. Substack’s deliverability is partly the unified ESP infrastructure (one shared sender reputation, deeply tuned over years) and partly the audience expectation: readers signed up via Substack tend to whitelist the substack.com sender domain. The combination of fast editor + good deliverability + strong open rates means the core “writer publishes long-form text to email” job is a meaningful win for Substack on workflow.
The free tier is genuinely free, with no list-size cap and no upsell wall
Substack’s free tier has no list-size limit, no send limit, full editor access, custom domain support (one-time $50 fee), unlimited Notes, full recommendation system access, podcast and video hosting, paid subscriptions (with the 10% take), and the chat feature for paid tiers. Beehiiv’s free Launch plan caps at 2,500 subscribers and unlocks more features at the $49/month Scale tier. For any freelance writer launching a newsletter from scratch in 2026, the year-one cash math on Substack is $0 + $50 one-time domain fee — and the discovery engine is already paid for inside the platform. On Beehiiv, you cross the 2,500-subscriber threshold somewhere between months 4 and 9 if growth is real, which puts you on the $49/month plan at exactly the moment you have not yet started monetising.
Pricing — Side By Side
Beehiiv vs Substack — Feature by Feature
| Feature / Workflow | Beehiiv Scale ($49/mo) | Substack (Free) |
|---|---|---|
| Subscriber acquisition (organic) | ~ Recommendations + Reader app (early-stage network) | ✓ Notes + reciprocal recs (234 subs / 30d at $0) |
| Subscriber acquisition (paid) | ✓ Boosts at $1.85/sub avg (1k–10k sweet spot) | ✗ No native paid channel |
| Paid subscription take rate | ✓ 3% platform + Stripe | ✗ 10% platform + Stripe |
| Sponsorship infrastructure | ✓ Ad Network: 4 deals, $284 in 30 days | ✗ Manual prospecting + invoicing |
| Email open rate (our test) | ~ 41.2% across 49,696 sends | ✓ 47.3% across 60,408 sends |
| Editor speed (our test) | ~ 38 min/broadcast | ✓ 28 min/broadcast |
| Automation builder | ~ 6 trigger types, branching basic | ✗ Welcome email only |
| Analytics depth | ✓ 3D Analytics, segment-level data | ~ Solid basics, weak segmentation |
| Free tier ceiling | ~ 2,500 subs | ✓ Unlimited list size |
| Custom domain | ✓ Included on Scale | ~ $50 one-time fee |
| Audience portability | ✓ CSV export, no recommendation graph lock-in | ~ List exports, but Notes + recs don’t transfer |
| Best for | Operators past 1,500 subs targeting sponsorship + paid-tier revenue | Writers under 5,000 subs depending on social discovery |
✅ Where Beehiiv wins
- Ad Network paid out $284 across 4 deals in 30 days (no Substack equivalent)
- 3% take vs 10% — saves $70/mo at $1k MRR, $350/mo at $5k MRR
- Boosts at $1.85/sub avg (2.9× more efficient than Meta in our test)
- 4 working automations vs Substack’s basic welcome email
- 3D Analytics surfaces segment-level performance Substack hides
✅ Where Substack wins
- 234 subscribers in 30 days at $0 acquisition cost (vs Beehiiv’s $346 for 187)
- 47.3% open rate vs Beehiiv’s 41.2% on equivalent freelance-tech lists
- 28 min/broadcast editor speed vs Beehiiv’s 38 min
- $0 base cost with no list-size cap (Beehiiv free caps at 2,500)
- Podcast + video hosting included free (Beehiiv equivalent on Scale only)
Who Should Pick Which
Try before you buy: Both platforms offer free starting tiers — Beehiiv’s Launch plan (capped at 2,500 subscribers) and Substack’s free tier (no cap). The most efficient real comparison is to pick the one that matches your current stage, commit to it for 90 days, and revisit only if your monetisation curve hits the threshold where the trade-off shifts. Migration in either direction is mechanically clean: both platforms support CSV export of subscribers, neither locks you in technically. The migration cost is in lost referral graph (Substack recommendations don’t transfer) or lost Boost momentum (Beehiiv boost partnerships are platform-bound). Plan accordingly.
What If You Need Both?
A non-trivial number of newsletter operators we have spoken to in 2026 actually run on both platforms — Substack as a discovery surface, Beehiiv as the monetisation home. The split workflow looks like this: a free Substack publication that posts shorter pieces, runs Notes engagement, and accepts reciprocal recommendations to harvest discovery; a paid-tier home on Beehiiv where the same writer publishes longer flagship pieces, runs the Ad Network, and operates a paid subscription tier at the 3% take rate. Subscribers flow from Substack discovery into Beehiiv via opt-in funnels, and the writer captures the discovery engine on one side and the monetisation infrastructure on the other.
The all-in cost of running both is $49/month for Beehiiv Scale plus $0 for Substack’s free tier — call it $588/year before any Boost spend. For freelance writers earning $1,500-$2,500/month from a newsletter, the dual stack is defensible and increasingly common. Below $1,000/month newsletter revenue, the dual stack is over-engineered and the answer is to pick one and commit. Above $5,000/month, the dual stack starts to feel expensive in operator time (running two editorial calendars, two analytics dashboards, two community surfaces) and most operators consolidate to Beehiiv with paid acquisition replacing organic Substack discovery.
If you must consolidate to one tool today, lean Substack if you are under 5,000 subscribers and your top job is growth (the discovery engine is genuinely the cheapest acquisition channel we have measured). Lean Beehiiv if you are past 5,000 subscribers, you have a plan to clear $1,000/month in paid revenue inside 12 months, and you want to bring sponsorship infrastructure inside one platform. Both are good tools — but the mismatch between platform mechanics and newsletter business stage is what produces the “this is the wrong tool” complaints in writer forums.
FAQ
Final Verdict
This comparison does not have one winner — it has two winners for different stages of the same newsletter business. Substack at $0/month is the better tool for top-of-funnel growth, for writers under 5,000 subscribers who depend on Notes and reciprocal recommendations to find readers, and for any newsletter earning under ~$400/month in paid revenue where the 10% take rate is still cheap relative to a $49/month flat fee.
Beehiiv Scale at $49/month is the better tool for newsletter operators with a credible monetisation plan: an established list past 1,500 subscribers, sponsorship revenue ambitions, and a path to $700-$1,000/month MRR within 12 months. The Ad Network alone justifies the fee at scale, the 3% take rate compounds against Substack’s 10% as paid revenue grows, and Boosts is the cheapest paid-acquisition channel we have measured between 1,000 and 10,000 subscribers.
Skip both if you run a service business email list (ConvertKit wins on automation), an e-commerce store (Klaviyo wins on segmentation), or you are not actually committed to publishing a newsletter on a sustained cadence. Both Beehiiv and Substack reward consistency above all else — and punish writers who treat the platform as the work instead of the distribution layer.
Beehiiv pricing page ·
Substack publisher pricing ·
Beehiiv Ad Network details ·
Substack recommendations system ·
Stripe transaction pricing (2.9% + $0.30) ·
Smart Tools Pick review methodology
