Substack vs Medium in 2026: Which Is Better for Writers?


TL;DR:
  • Substack = newsletter-first. You own your subscriber list, charge per subscription, build a direct audience relationship.
  • Medium = blog-first. Audience is Medium's, you earn from the Partner Program based on read time, no direct subscriber list.
  • Substack wins for building a long-term creator business. Medium wins for fast initial traffic via its built-in audience.

Substack vs Medium — Quick Comparison

FeatureSubstackMedium
FormatNewsletter (email + web)Blog posts on Medium.com
You own audienceYes (export anytime)No (Medium owns)
Subscribers see youDirect via emailAlgorithm-dependent
MonetisationPaid subscriptionsPartner Program (read time + claps)
CostFree (10% fee on paid subs)$0 to publish (readers pay $5/mo for full access)
Built-in audienceLimited (Substack discovery)Large (Medium homepage + tags)
SEOStrong (custom domain)Strong (Medium domain authority)
CommentsYes (paid + free)Yes (highlights + responses)
Mobile appYes (Substack app)Yes (Medium app)
CustomizationLimitedVery limited
Custom domain$50/yearAvailable with custom domain plan
Best forBuilding creator businessQuick traffic + Partner earnings

Substack — Pros and Cons

Pros

  • You own your subscribers — exportable, portable.
  • Direct email delivery — guaranteed inbox, not algorithm-dependent.
  • Paid subscriptions = recurring revenue, not just per-article.
  • Substack Notes for cross-promotion.
  • Strong network effects via Recommendations.
  • Long-term creator-business platform.

Cons

  • Smaller initial audience than Medium.
  • 10% revenue cut on paid subs.
  • You handle distribution yourself — Substack doesn't push your content to non-followers much.
  • Custom domain costs $50/year.

Medium — Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Built-in audience — Medium has 100M+ monthly readers.
  • Partner Program pays you based on read time.
  • Strong SEO — Medium articles often rank in Google's top 10.
  • Easy to start — no setup; just write and publish.
  • Boost system — top articles get amplified to broader Medium audience.
  • Free for writers — readers pay $5/month for full access.

Cons

  • You don't own your audience. If Medium changes the algorithm or shuts down, you lose them.
  • Earnings per article are small — most articles earn $1-$50 lifetime.
  • No subscriber list — readers follow you on Medium, not via email.
  • Algorithm-dependent — articles can be invisible if they don't get curated.
  • Crowded — millions of writers compete for views.

Earnings Comparison (Real Numbers)

ScenarioSubstack (1K paid subs at $10/mo)Medium (active writer, 50K reads/mo)
Monthly revenue$10,000$200-$1,500
Annual$108,000 (after 10% fee)$2,400-$18,000
Time investment1-2 posts/week1-3 articles/week
Long-term valueOwned audience, repeat revenueEarnings only while writing

Substack scales much better for serious creators. Medium is better for quick income from existing writing.

Which Should You Choose?

GoalBest fit
Build a long-term creator businessSubstack
Earn quick income from past articlesMedium
Build email list for a future businessSubstack
Test writing as a side incomeMedium (low commitment)
Have an existing audience to convertSubstack
Niche journalism / commentarySubstack
SEO-driven trafficBoth work; Medium is faster to traffic

Can You Use Both?

Yes — many writers do:

  • Publish on Medium first for quick traffic + Partner earnings.
  • Repost on Substack to build owned audience.
  • Add a CTA in your Medium articles linking to your Substack signup.
  • Convert Medium readers into Substack subscribers over time.

This dual-platform strategy gives you the audience-discovery benefit of Medium + the long-term ownership of Substack.

Migration: Medium → Substack

To migrate from Medium to Substack:

  1. Substack has a Medium import tool (Settings → Import) — pulls in articles directly.
  2. Add a sign-up CTA at the bottom of every Medium article: "Get my newsletter at [substack URL]".
  3. Slowly transition new content to Substack-first.
  4. Keep Medium archives for SEO traffic.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Medium pay better than Substack?

Per-article: Medium can pay quicker. Long-term: Substack pays much more if you build a paid subscriber base.

Can I publish the same article on Medium and Substack?

Yes — but Medium's Partner Program prefers original content. Best practice: publish first on one, then re-publish 1-2 weeks later on the other.

Does Substack have a built-in audience like Medium?

Smaller. Substack relies on Recommendations and Notes for discovery, while Medium has a larger reader base browsing tags.

Which is better for SEO?

Medium has higher domain authority but more competition. Substack with a custom domain can rank well over time. Both can work.

Should I move from Medium to Substack?

If you want to build a long-term audience and recurring revenue: yes. If you're casually writing for side income: stick with Medium.

Key Takeaways

  • Substack = newsletter platform; you own your subscribers.
  • Medium = blog platform; Medium owns your audience.
  • Substack scales better for serious creators ($10K-$100K+/year typical).
  • Medium offers faster initial traffic via built-in audience.
  • Many writers use both: Medium for traffic + Substack for owned audience.

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