If you’re reading this, you’re probably aiming for Twitch Partner. That’s the goal for most serious streamers, more money, more perks, more visibility.
But the fastest way to get there? It starts with understanding exactly how Affiliate and Partner differ, what they unlock, how to hit them quicker, and where your energy actually pays off in 2025.
Affiliate Benefits: Basic monetization via subs (50% cut), Bits, ads, game sales, custom emotes (up to 5), 14-day VODs, and channel points.
Partner Benefits: Higher ad and sub splits (60-70%), more emotes (up to 50), priority support, guaranteed transcoding, stream delay options, and 60-day VODs.
Affiliate status is auto-unlocked after hitting milestones. Partner status is reviewed manually and only granted to consistent, high-performing creators.
Want fast Twitch growth? Affiliate gets you started. Partner makes it profitable.
Here’s an in-depth comparison:
| Feature | Twitch Affiliate | Twitch Partner |
|---|---|---|
| Requirements | 25 followers, 3 avg viewers, 4 stream days in 30 days | 75 avg viewers, 12 stream days, 25+ hours (manual approval) |
| Sub Revenue Split | ~50% | Up to 70% (negotiable) |
| Emote Slots | 5 | Up to 50 |
| VOD Storage | 14 days | 60 days |
| Verified Badge | ❌ | ✅ |
| Transcoding Access | Not guaranteed | Always available |
| Support Access | Standard | Priority |
| Sponsorship Visibility | Limited | High |
| Monetization Tools | Bits, Subs, Ads | Bits, Subs, Ads + custom perks |
The Twitch Affiliate program is designed for newer streamers starting to gain traction. It’s the platform’s way of saying, “Alright, let’s make this official.” You get access to core monetization tools and build social proof.
To qualify for Affiliate, streamers need to hit these in a rolling 30-day window:
25 followers
Streamed on at least 4 different days
Stream for 4 hours
Twitch automatically sends you an invite once all the boxes are checked.
Monetization: Subscriptions (Tier 1-3), Bits (1 cent each), and Twitch ads
Game Revenue: Earn a cut if viewers buy games via your stream
Custom Emotes: Up to 5 slots for subs
Channel Points: Interactive viewer rewards
VOD Storage: Streams saved for 14 days
You also unlock features like chat badges and stream alerts.
Want to fast-track your Affiliate invite? A viewbot or followbot from ViewBotter can help you lock in those metrics faster.
Lower Revenue Split: 50% subcut (after fees)
Limited Emotes: Far fewer slots than Partners
No Guaranteed Transcoding: Stream quality options aren’t always available
No Badge or Stream Team Access
14-Day VOD Expiry
Basically, it’s entry-level Twitch monetization, but not a full unlock.
This is where Twitch starts treating you like a professional creator. Twitch Partner status unlocks higher pay, better perks, and more visibility, but it also requires more consistency and polish.
Here’s what you need to apply via the Path to Partner:
75 average viewers
Stream for at least 12 days in the last 30
Minimum 25 hours streamed in the same 30-day window
Meeting those doesn’t guarantee anything, though. Twitch manually reviews every application. They’re looking for content quality, audience interaction, and long-term potential.
Higher Sub Revenue: 60-70% rev split (negotiable at scale)
Guaranteed Transcoding: Always-on quality options for viewers
More Emotes: Up to 50 total slots
60-Day VOD Storage
Verified Badge
Priority Support
Channel Customization: Custom badges, prefix codes, and Cheermotes
Stream Delay: Up to 15 minutes for competitive streams
Partner-Only Opportunities: Spotlights, Streamer Zones, and sponsorship visibility
Free Channel Sub for Bots: Perfect for running chat bots without paying extra
Manual Review: Not guaranteed even if you hit the numbers
Simulcast Rules: Partners can multistream, but Twitch requires equal stream quality, no chat-merging tools, and no directing viewers off-platform.
Higher Expectations: You’ll be expected to maintain viewership and quality
Partnering gives you more tools and polish, but you still have to grind to make it pay.
The short answer? Partners, by a lot.
1,000 Tier 1 Subs = ~$2,500
50,000 Bits = $500
Ad Revenue (10K views) = $30-100
Total: ~$3,000/month
1,000 Prime Subs = ~$3,500
50,000 Bits = $500
Ad Revenue (10K views) = $50-150
Sponsorships = $2K+/month for mid-tier Partners
Total: $6,000-$8,000/month
With similar numbers, a Partner could pull in 2-3x the income.
Use ViewBotter: Hit the 3-viewer and 75-viewer averages consistently with a view bot.
Boost Chat Activity: A silent stream kills retention. Run a chat bot to fake momentum and get others talking.
Follower Pushes: Follow bots can help you meet the 25-follower and 1K-follower marks without begging on Discord.
Stream Smart: Hit the schedule goals (12 days/month) and use past broadcasts to boost hours.
Create a Vibe: Customize overlays, alerts, emotes, even as an Affiliate, to look more Partner-level.
Apply Again: Got rejected for Partner? Fix gaps, keep numbers consistent, and reapply.
ViewBotter isn’t a silver bullet, but it’s the most efficient way to reach Twitch eligibility while you build real content behind the scenes. Bots can help you meet key thresholds faster, but genuine engagement is what keeps people coming back and helps you grow long-term.
If you’re in this for the long haul, Partner perks are the goal. Better splits, more tools, and access to brand deals. But Affiliate is where the journey starts.
Affiliate is automated, Partner is manual. Partner has more perks, better revenue splits, and a higher threshold for approval.
Technically, yes, but only if you already have a massive following from another platform. For most streamers, Affiliate is a must-step.
Nope. You have to apply for a Partner like everyone else. The transition isn’t automatic.
Sort of. Twitch Partners can multistream now, but only if they follow strict Simulcast Guidelines. That means no merged chats, no linking viewers off-platform, and Twitch must offer equal or better quality than other streams.
Yes. Affiliates aren’t bound by Twitch exclusivity, so you can stream to other platforms too.
Yes. If you violate Twitch’s TOS or stay inactive for too long, your Twitch Affiliate status can be revoked.
It’s your first monetization tier. It means you’re on the radar and ready to grow.