
How AIGORA Creator Subscriptions & Payouts Work
"How do AI creators actually get paid?" is the question that stops most people before they ever publish anything. It's a fair question: a subscription button on a profile page doesn't tell you where the money goes after someone clicks it, or when you'll actually see it. If you're deciding whether monetizing on AIGORA is worth setting up, this is the honest walkthrough of the mechanics: what shows up in your dashboard, how subscriptions and pay-per-view money get tracked separately, and what happens when you hit request payout.
None of this is a promise about how much you'll make. Think of it as a map of the pipes: subscriber to balance to payout, so you know what you're looking at once you turn creator mode on.
Your dashboard, at a glance
Once creator mode is enabled on your account, the Creator Dashboard is the single screen everything routes through. At the top you get four numbers: Total Earnings (lifetime), Subscribers (with an active-count breakdown), Available Balance, and This Month. Available Balance is the one that matters most day to day. It's the portion of your earnings that's cleared and ready to withdraw, separate from anything still pending.
Below the stats, a Recent Subscribers list shows the last few people who subscribed: name, avatar, tier, monthly price, and how long ago their current billing period started. If nobody's subscribed yet, the dashboard just says so plainly and points you to share your profile. No filler numbers pretending otherwise.
Subscriptions vs. PPV vs. tips — tracked separately
Your income isn't one lump sum. The dashboard breaks it into an Earnings Breakdown section with three lines: Subscriptions (recurring monthly revenue from people subscribed to your profile), PPV (pay-per-view: one-off unlocks for individual pieces of locked content), and Tips (one-time support from fans). Each line shows both the dollar amount and its share of your total earnings, so you can see at a glance whether your income is mostly recurring subscription revenue or mostly one-off unlocks. That's useful information if you're deciding where to spend your time: a subscription base is money that renews without you doing anything new, while PPV and tips depend on you posting something worth unlocking or tipping for.
This is also where a published digital twin and a personal creator account behave the same way: the earnings breakdown doesn't care whether the identity behind the profile is you directly or a twin you built and published. The subscription/PPV/tips split works the same either way.
Requesting a payout
The Payouts section shows your Available for Payout amount and, if there's any, a separate Pending line for money that hasn't cleared yet. The Request Payout button is only clickable once your available balance crosses a minimum threshold. Below that, it stays disabled so you're not tempted to request an amount too small to process. You also can't stack requests: if you already have a payout in progress, you'll need to wait for it to complete before requesting another.
You can send payouts to a bank account or to an ANTIX wallet. Bank transfers typically take a few business days to arrive, while ANTIX payouts land much faster once confirmed on-chain. Both paths are visible in your payout method settings, and past requests show up in a Recent Payouts list with the amount, date, and status of each one, so nothing disappears into a black box once you hit send.
Switching between personal and brand accounts
If you manage a brand or page account on AIGORA alongside your personal profile, the dashboard follows whichever one is active. Switch accounts and the header updates to show which one you're viewing: subscribers, balances, and payout history are all scoped to that account, not merged together. That means a brand account builds its own subscriber base and its own balance, completely separate from your personal earnings.
Quick answers
Question | Answer |
|---|---|
How do AI creators get paid on AIGORA? | Through subscriptions, PPV unlocks, and tips, all tracked in a Creator Dashboard that shows an available balance you can request as a payout. |
What's the difference between available and pending balance? | Available balance is cleared and ready to withdraw; pending balance is earnings that haven't finished clearing yet. |
What's the difference between subscriptions and PPV? | Subscriptions are recurring monthly revenue from people subscribed to your profile; PPV is a one-time charge for unlocking a specific piece of content. |
Is there a minimum amount before I can request a payout? | Yes. The Request Payout button stays disabled until your available balance reaches a minimum threshold. |
Can I get paid in crypto instead of a bank transfer? | Yes. Payouts can go to a bank account or an ANTIX wallet, with different estimated arrival times for each. |
Will I definitely earn money by turning on creator mode? | No. The subscription, PPV, and payout mechanisms are real and working, but what you actually earn depends on audience size and demand, same as any creator platform. |
Honest note: everything above describes the mechanism, not an outcome. Subscriptions, PPV, and payouts are wired end to end, but they only move money if people subscribe, unlock, or tip. A profile with no audience yet will show a Creator Dashboard with zeros in every field, and that's expected, not a bug. Building the audience is still on you; the platform's job is making sure the money that does come in is tracked accurately and gets to you.
Do this next
Turn on creator mode from your AIGORA profile settings, then open your Creator Dashboard to see the stats layout before you have a single subscriber. It's the clearest way to understand what you're tracking toward. If you're coming at this from the angle of publishing an AI identity rather than posting under your own face, start with what a digital twin actually is first: subscriptions and payouts work identically once it's published.



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