You built the audience. You wrote the product. You handled every support message. Every sale, a platform you started using three years ago takes 10% of the revenue.
This is not a complaint about platforms. It is a transaction: you pay to access infrastructure and discoverability. The question worth asking is whether you are still getting your money's worth, now that your buyers already know how to find you. The answer is different depending on your situation, and the maths can tell you which one applies.
What that 10% costs when you annualise it
Lena sold Lightroom presets on Gumroad's free plan. She noticed the fee on individual sales but never multiplied it out. At €2,800/month revenue, she was paying €280/month in platform fees alone, before Stripe processing on top. That was €3,360 per year. She set up a direct product page in one afternoon. The saving in year one covered every tool subscription she pays for.
The percentage looks small on one sale. At consistent monthly volume, it is the size of a meaningful business expense. Platform fees are tax-deductible, which reduces the cost by your marginal rate, but does not eliminate it.
Platform fee structures compared
The advertised rate is rarely the full rate. The useful comparison is what you actually keep from a €50 sale, and whether the platform is still doing something valuable enough to justify the gap.
| Platform | You keep from a €50 sale | When the fee may still be worth it |
|---|---|---|
| Gumroad (free plan) | ~€43.25 | Early stage, testing demand, or still getting meaningful discovery from the platform itself |
| Gumroad (Creator, $10/mo) | ~€48.20 | Better than Gumroad free once sales are steady, if you want to stay inside Gumroad for now |
| Patreon (Pro tier) | ~€44.35 | Membership products where community and recurring billing matter more than one-off file delivery |
| Stripe direct (EU) | ~€48.50 | Warm audience, repeat buyers, and traffic that already comes from your own channels |
The Gumroad Creator plan changes the calculation significantly. At €2,000/month, the $10/month plan pays for itself by month one compared to the free plan. If you are on the free plan above roughly €100/month in sales, switching to Creator is the better choice inside the Gumroad ecosystem. Whether to leave entirely is a separate question.
What selling direct actually requires
Most sellers overestimate the setup. There is no server, no developer, no three-week sprint. Here is what the infrastructure actually is.
The barrier is psychological more than technical. The setup is smaller than Gumroad's own onboarding.
When to stay, when to move
The decision depends on where your buyers come from. Platform discovery (Gumroad's Discover tab, Etsy search, Patreon browse) is real and valuable at the right volume — it generates buyers who would not otherwise find you. But once a seller has an established audience, the majority of sales come from that audience, not from platform discovery. At that point, you are paying platform fees on revenue you generated yourself.
The practical test: estimate what percentage of your last 30 sales came from people who already knew you (your social media, your email list, a recommendation) versus people who found you through the platform's own search or browse. If that split is 60% known-audience or higher, you are paying a platform fee on sales that came from your own work.
If you want the practical setup from file to payment link, read how to sell digital downloads online.
The migration is simpler than it sounds
You do not announce a move. You do not ask buyers to update anything. You update the link you share. That is the entire migration for most digital product sellers with a social media presence.
The buyers who find you through your own channels, who click the link in your bio or your email, need nothing more than a working checkout and a download link. They are not loyal to Gumroad's interface. They are loyal to your product.
For the discovery audience — people who might find you through platform search — you can keep a presence running while routing direct traffic to your own page. Many creators run both indefinitely: platform presence for cold-audience discoverability, direct page for warm-audience sales.
"Gumroad handles file delivery automatically. I don't want to set that up myself."
It is already set up. Any product page tool worth using handles digital file delivery: you upload the file, buyer pays, buyer receives a download link. There is no configuration per sale. The concern is legitimate but the setup is a file upload and a single toggle.
"My buyers know Gumroad's checkout. Will they trust something else?"
Your buyers know you. The purchase they made on Gumroad was a purchase from you, not from Gumroad. A returning buyer who clicks your direct link and finds a clean, functional checkout will complete the purchase. What causes hesitation is a broken page or a confusing experience, not the absence of a Gumroad logo. Stripe's checkout is more widely recognised than Gumroad's in Europe.