💰 Monetisation

How to Monetize Your Newsletter Without Paid Subscriptions

Updated June 2026 📰 Newsletter tips · List your newsletter free →
Paid subscriptions are the most talked-about newsletter revenue model, but for most newsletters under 5,000 subscribers, they're not the most effective first move. This guide covers the monetisation strategies that actually work at different stages of growth, with honest numbers on what each requires and what it can realistically earn — starting from 500 subscribers.

Why Most Newsletter Monetisation Advice Is Wrong

The default advice for monetising a newsletter is to launch a paid subscription. For most newsletters, this is the wrong first move. Paid subscriptions work brilliantly at scale, but they're brutal before you have an engaged audience — a 1% paid conversion rate from 500 subscribers is 5 paying customers, which isn't a business.

The monetisation strategies below are roughly ordered by when they become viable relative to your subscriber count. Start with what fits where you are now.

$500Typical monthly income from a well-placed newsletter sponsorship with 1,500 engaged subscribers

Sponsorships: Start Earlier Than You Think

The biggest misconception about newsletter sponsorships is that you need tens of thousands of subscribers to attract them. You don't. You need a clearly defined audience.

A newsletter with 1,500 engaged subscribers in a specific niche — say, independent coffee shop owners, or UX designers at fintech startups — can charge meaningful sponsorship rates because the audience is exactly what certain advertisers need. The sponsor isn't paying for eyeballs; they're paying for access to a pre-qualified, trusting audience that happens to be exactly who they want to reach.

How to price your first newsletter sponsorship

A standard starting point for newsletter sponsorships is $25–50 per 1,000 subscribers (CPM), adjusted up for high open rates and niche specificity. A newsletter with 2,000 subscribers, a 50% open rate, and a hyper-specific professional audience (e.g. "venture-backed startup founders") can realistically charge $150–250 per issue placement — more than a generic newsletter with 10× the subscribers.

Where to find your first newsletter sponsor

Affiliate Income: The Lowest-Friction Revenue Stream

Affiliate marketing gets a bad reputation because so much of it is badly done — generic recommendations for products the writer has never used, buried in a list alongside a hundred other links. Done well, it's a genuinely valuable service to your readers and a reliable, passive revenue stream for you.

The rule is simple: only promote products you use and would recommend regardless of commission. Your readers trust you. Recommending something that doesn't serve them destroys that trust far faster than any commission is worth.

The highest-converting affiliate placements in newsletters share one trait: they're woven into the content naturally, not dropped in as an afterthought. "I've been using Readwise to resurface my highlights and it's genuinely changed how I retain what I read — affiliate link in bio" converts at a fraction of the rate of a full paragraph explaining specifically how you use it and why.

Digital Products: Your Highest Margin Option

Once you understand what your readers want to achieve, you can create a product that helps them achieve it — and sell it indefinitely for near-zero marginal cost. This is the highest-margin revenue model available to newsletter creators.

Digital product ideas for newsletter creators

Listing on Newsletter Discovery Platforms

Getting listed on savd.site and similar newsletter discovery platforms brings you readers who are actively looking for newsletters to follow — which means they're more likely to become engaged subscribers, more likely to open consistently, and more likely to convert to paid or purchase your products.

Higher engagement means better sponsorship rates. A newsletter with 2,000 subscribers and a 55% open rate commands significantly higher sponsorship rates than one with the same subscriber count and a 20% open rate. Everything that grows your engagement rate makes your newsletter more monetisable — and discovery platforms bring you engaged readers, not passive ones.

When to Launch Paid Subscriptions

Paid subscriptions work when three things are true simultaneously:

  1. Your newsletter is the primary or only place readers can get what you provide. If your content is available elsewhere for free, paid tiers struggle to convert.
  2. Your readers have a professional or business reason to pay. Readers who can expense your newsletter — because it makes them better at their job — convert to paid at much higher rates than readers who subscribe for personal interest.
  3. You have enough free subscribers that even a 1–2% conversion rate creates a viable business. With 10,000 free subscribers, a 2% conversion to a $10/month tier is $2,000/month. With 500 free subscribers, the same math produces $100/month.

The most common mistake is launching paid tiers too early, before the audience is large enough or engaged enough to convert in meaningful numbers. Build a deeply engaged free audience first. Then the paid conversion is far easier.

Adding Product Links to Your Newsletter Profile

On savd.site, creators with the PRO upgrade can add up to 5 product links directly to their newsletter profile — visible to every reader who views their listing. This is a direct monetisation surface: if you have a course, ebook, or tool to sell, your profile becomes an additional discovery channel for it. Each $9 upgrade unlocks 5 link slots, and you can add more rounds as your product catalogue grows.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you monetize a newsletter without paid subscriptions?
The most effective ways to monetise a newsletter without paid subscriptions are: sponsored placements (starting from around 1,500 engaged subscribers), affiliate marketing for products you genuinely use, digital products like templates or ebooks, and consulting or advisory services enabled by your newsletter's positioning.
How many subscribers do you need to make money from a newsletter?
With 1,000 to 2,000 highly engaged subscribers in a specific niche, newsletter sponsorships typically generate $150 to $500 per issue. Affiliate income can start from any subscriber count. Paid subscriptions typically require 5,000 or more free subscribers for the economics to work well.
What is a good open rate for a newsletter?
Industry average open rates for newsletters in 2026 range from 20 to 35 percent. A good newsletter open rate is 40 percent or above. Elite newsletters with highly engaged audiences often achieve 50 to 70 percent open rates. Open rate matters more than subscriber count for most monetisation strategies.
Can you make a living from a Substack newsletter?
Yes — many creators earn full-time income from Substack newsletters. Most do it through a combination of paid subscriptions, sponsorships, and digital products rather than subscriptions alone. The threshold for full-time income varies widely by niche, but typically requires either 500 or more paid subscribers or strong sponsorship income.

Is your newsletter on the leaderboard?

savd.site is the discovery platform for growing newsletters — 500 to 50,000 subscribers. Get found by readers actively looking for new newsletters to follow.

List your newsletter free →