<b>The gross-to-net gap is the most under-reported number in creator economics</b>
Thesis: published creator income figures are almost universally gross, and the deductions between gross and take-home are large enough to change the entire picture.
Context. Self-employed creators face platform fees, payment-processor cuts, self-employment tax, equipment and software costs, contractor payments (editors, designers), and reversed or refunded affiliate sales. None of these appear in a revenue screenshot.
Findings. Where creators have disclosed full P&Ls, take-home after costs and taxes frequently lands at a substantial fraction below gross — and for creators reinvesting in production, the gap is wider still. The businesses that look most impressive on revenue are sometimes thinner on margin because production scaled with reach.
Caveats. Disclosed P&Ls are a tiny, self-selected sample, and cost structures vary enormously by content type — a solo writer and a multi-person video studio are not comparable. Tax treatment is jurisdiction-specific.
Implications. Translate any gross figure into an estimated net before benchmarking yourself against it. Margin, not revenue, determines sustainability.
What we still don't know: representative margin distributions, because creators share revenue far more readily than they share costs.
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<b>The gross-to-net gap is the most under-reported number in creator economics</b>
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