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Collabstr alternativethe fee math, side by side

A Collabstr alternative built on a flat 5% each side.

Collabstr is an established influencer marketplace with a large public catalog — and on its free tier it takes 15% from the creator's payout and a 10% hiring fee from the brand.1 ViewStage is the newer marketplace built around a different number: a flat 5% on each side, printed on the same receipt both parties see.2

We're not going to pretend ViewStage has Collabstr's history or its catalog — it doesn't, yet. What it has is the fee math, an AI review on every video before a brand ever sees it, and a per-creator budget you agree to before anyone films. If the size of the cut is what sent you looking for a Collabstr alternative, start here.

We’re onboarding in waves — signing up puts you in line.

Campaigns run onYouTubeTikTokInstagramrolling out5

ViewStage

Deal receipt · shown to both sides

Agreed deal price
$1,000.00
Brand service fee (5%)
+$50.00
Brand pays
$1,050.00
Platform fee (5%)
−$50.00
Creator receives
$950.00
ViewStage keeps
$100.00
Subscription
$0.00
Hidden markup
$0.00

No middleman was paid
in the making of this deal

Receipt for a 1,000 dollar deal on ViewStage: the brand pays 1,050 dollars including a 5 percent service fee, the creator receives 950 dollars after a 5 percent platform fee, ViewStage keeps 100 dollars, and there is no subscription or hidden markup.

02The receipt nobody else prints

The same $1,000 deal, two receipts.

On ViewStage a $1,000 deal costs the brand $1,050 and leaves the creator with $950 — every figure on the receipt, disclosed to both sides.2

Total taken out of the deal

The same $1,000 deal on Collabstr's free tier: the creator has 15% taken from their payout — about $150 — and the brand pays a 10% hiring fee on top, about $100. Roughly $250 leaves the middle of the deal ($150 from the creator + $100 from the brand), against about $100 on ViewStage ($50 + $50).12

Collabstr does cut the brand fee to 5% on its paid Premium plan (around $399/month) — so the brand can buy the fee down, but only by adding a subscription ViewStage doesn't charge at all.3

ViewStage
Brand pays $1,050.00 · creator keeps $950.00 · subscription $0.00 — about $100 total out of the deal.2
Collabstr (free tier)
Brand pays ~$1,100 (10% hiring fee) · creator keeps ~$850 (15% taken) — about $250 total out of the deal.1

The full breakdown lives on the pricing page.

ViewStage

Deal receipt · shown to both sides

Agreed deal price
$1,000.00
Brand service fee (5%)
+$50.00
Brand pays
$1,050.00
Platform fee (5%)
−$50.00
Creator receives
$950.00
ViewStage keeps
$100.00
Subscription
$0.00
Hidden markup
$0.00

No middleman was paid
in the making of this deal

Receipt for a 1,000 dollar deal on ViewStage: the brand pays 1,050 dollars including a 5 percent service fee, the creator receives 950 dollars after a 5 percent platform fee, ViewStage keeps 100 dollars, and there is no subscription or hidden markup.

03Fair is fair

What each one is good at.

Collabstr's strength is maturity. It has been running an influencer marketplace long enough to build a large, browsable catalog of creators, it owns the “influencer marketplace” search term, and — like ViewStage — it holds the brand's money in escrow and releases it on approval.1 If a deep, ready-to-browse roster is the single most important thing to you today, that is a real advantage, and it's fair to say so.

ViewStage is new. It launched recently, and its roster is growing rather than vast. The honest case for choosing it over Collabstr isn't “we've been here longer” — it's three specific things.

  1. The fee is flat, and printed.

    5% on the brand side, 5% on the creator side, against the exact amount both sides agreed — about 10% combined, all of it disclosed. No tier to buy down, no fee that only drops if you subscribe.2

  2. Every video is screened before the brand sees it.

    An automated review checks each submission for FTC disclosure, brand safety and competitor conflicts, whether the sponsor actually appears by name, production quality, and the campaign's do's, don'ts and required hashtags. Humans make the final call.4

  3. You agree the number before anyone films.

    Brands post a per-creator budget on every campaign; creators see it up front and can propose their own rate. The amount both sides accept is exactly what goes into escrow.2

04The part everyone hides

One fee, two halves — and what it replaces.

ViewStage's whole business model is two lines. The brand pays the agreed price plus a flat 5% service fee. The creator keeps 95% of the agreed price, with a flat 5% as the only deduction. That's it — no monthly plan, no per-seat licence, no listing fee, no markup hidden in the middle. Payment is processed by Stripe, and those processing costs come out of ViewStage's share, not either side's line.2

What you pay, by platform · as checked June 2026

ViewStage
Creator side: 5% (keep 95%). Brand side: 5% on top. Subscription: $0.2
Collabstr (free / Basic & Pro)
Creator: 15% taken from payout. Brand: 10% hiring fee. The Premium plan drops the brand fee to 5% for ~$399/month.1
Fiverr
Sellers keep 80% after a 20% commission; buyers pay a 5.5% service fee, plus a small-order fee on orders under $50.6
Subscription influencer-marketing platforms
Quote-priced peers (Upfluence, Aspire, #paid) don't publish rates; publicly-priced ones run from Insense ~$400/month up to Influee $229–$999/month, each with a marketplace fee on creator payments on top.7

The pattern across the paid platforms is the same: the headline fee is rarely the whole fee. A flat 5% each side, against the agreed amount, is the entire price of using ViewStage. The full breakdown lives on the pricing page.

05What the 5% covers

A review on every video, and money that waits in escrow.

Both platforms hold the brand's payment in escrow and release it on the brand's approval — that's table stakes, and Collabstr does it too.1 What the flat 5% buys on ViewStage that a marketplace listing alone doesn't is the review that runs before a brand spends a minute watching.

Every submission is screened automatically — audio, frames, and on-screen text — for the things that get UGC creators and brands in trouble: FTC disclosure present and audible, brand safety and competitor conflicts, the sponsor appearing by name, production quality, and the campaign's do's, don'ts and required hashtags. Only work that clears the bar reaches the brand's queue, and humans make the final approval call.4

The review sets guardrails, not scripts. Disclosure, safety, and the campaign rules are checked; the jokes, the pacing, and the read on your audience stay yours. That's the loop, step by step, on the how-it-works page.

The brand's payment goes into escrow when the deal is agreed — before filming — and releases to the creator when the brand approves the work. Payments are processed by Stripe.2

If a video doesn't pass

It isn't silently rejected. The review returns the specific findings — what failed, where in the video, and a suggested fix for each one — and the creator revises and resubmits. A brand can ask for a revision too. Nothing about a deal dead-ends at “under review.”4

06No velvet rope

Matched by fit, not by follower count.

A browsable catalog rewards whoever a brand happens to find and recognise. ViewStage ranks creators against a campaign by fit: roughly half the score is the semantic match between the brief and what a creator actually makes, about a third is structured fit — niche, format, budget, platform — and the audience-size signal is deliberately capped, so past roughly 500K subscribers a bigger channel stops scoring higher.8

There's no follower minimum to join, and audience size is never a requirement. The reach a brand sees comes from the creator's connected accounts over platform OAuth — synced from YouTube's and TikTok's own APIs — not a self-reported media kit.85 If you're a UGC creator who's been overlooked on catalog-style marketplaces because the number next to your name was small, fit-first ranking is the reason to look at ViewStage.

Join the creator waitlist

07Asked & answered

Fair questions, straight answers.

Is ViewStage a good Collabstr alternative?

It depends on what you're optimizing for. Collabstr is established with a large, browsable creator catalog and holds payment in escrow. ViewStage is newer, so its roster is growing rather than vast — but it charges a flat 5% on each side instead of Collabstr's 15% creator fee and 10% brand fee, screens every video with AI before the brand sees it, and lets both sides agree the exact amount that goes into escrow before filming.

How do ViewStage and Collabstr fees compare?

On its free tier, Collabstr takes 15% from the creator's payout and charges the brand a 10% hiring fee; the brand fee drops to 5% only on its paid Premium plan, around $399/month (collabstr.com, as checked June 2026). ViewStage charges a flat 5% added on the brand's side and a flat 5% deducted on the creator's side of the agreed price — about 10% combined, disclosed to both, with no subscription.

On a $1,000 deal, what does each platform cost?

On ViewStage the brand pays $1,050 and the creator receives $950 — ViewStage keeps $100, with no subscription. On Collabstr's free tier, the creator has about $150 (15%) taken from their payout and the brand pays about $100 (10%) on top, so roughly $250 leaves the middle of the deal versus about $100 on ViewStage (collabstr.com, as checked June 2026).

Does ViewStage hold payment in escrow like Collabstr?

Yes. Like Collabstr, ViewStage holds the brand's payment in escrow and releases it on the brand's approval. The payment goes into escrow when the deal is agreed — before filming — and is processed by Stripe. ViewStage adds an AI review of every submission before the brand sees it, which a catalog listing alone doesn't include.

Is ViewStage better for small or new UGC creators than Collabstr?

It's built for fit rather than catalog visibility. ViewStage ranks creators against each campaign — roughly half the score is the match between the brief and what you make, with the audience-size signal deliberately capped so a bigger channel doesn't simply win. There's no follower minimum, and the reach brands see is synced from your connected YouTube or TikTok account, not a media kit.

Which platforms does ViewStage support?

Campaigns run on YouTube and TikTok today, with Instagram rolling out next and more platforms on the way. Creators connect their accounts over OAuth so reach figures come from the platform's own APIs.

Comparing managed UGC platforms instead? See the Billo comparison.

08Admission

Switch the math, keep the escrow.

Nothing to price out and no plan to compare — the 5% on each side only ever applies to a deal you've already agreed to. Set up either side in a couple of minutes.

We’re onboarding in waves — signing up puts you in line.

The fine print (we mean it)

  1. 1.Collabstr fees, as checked June 2026: Collabstr takes a 15% commission from the creator's payout on every plan; the brand pays a 10% marketplace/hiring fee on the Free (Basic) and Pro tiers, reduced to 5% only on the paid Premium plan (~$399/month). Only the brand hiring fee changes by tier — the 15% creator commission does not. Funds are held in escrow and released on brand approval. Source: collabstr.com/pricing.
  2. 2.ViewStage's standard rate is 5% added on the brand's side and 5% deducted on the creator's side of the agreed price — about 10% of a deal combined, all of it disclosed to both parties. On a $1,000 deal the brand pays $1,050, the creator receives $950, and ViewStage keeps $100. Each campaign carries a per-creator budget the brand sets; creators see it and can propose their own rate, and the agreed amount is what gets escrowed. Payments and escrow are processed by Stripe, and payment-processing costs come out of ViewStage's share, not yours.
  3. 3.Collabstr's Premium plan (~$399/month, as checked June 2026, collabstr.com/pricing) lowers the brand's hiring fee from 10% to 5%; ViewStage charges no subscription on any tier.
  4. 4.Automated checks cover FTC disclosure, brand safety, competitor conflicts, sponsor presence, production quality, and the campaign's do's, don'ts, and required hashtags. They set guardrails, not scripts. Humans make the final approval call, and when a check fails the creator receives the specific findings — what failed, where, and a suggested fix — and can revise and resubmit. FTC disclosure obligations: “Disclosures 101 for Social Media Influencers,” ftc.gov (16 CFR Part 255, revised 2023).
  5. 5.Campaigns run on YouTube and TikTok today; Instagram is rolling out as Meta review clears. Reach and audience figures are synced from creators' connected accounts via platform OAuth (YouTube and TikTok), not self-reported media kits.
  6. 6.Fiverr fees, as checked June 2026: sellers are credited 80% of each order after a 20% commission; buyers pay a 5.5% service fee on top of the gig price, plus a fixed small-order fee on orders under $50. Source: Fiverr Help Center service-fee articles (fiverr.com).
  7. 7.Subscription influencer-marketing platforms vary widely. Upfluence, Aspire, and #paid are quote-priced and do not publish rates. Publicly-priced peers run from Insense from ~$400/month (annual billing; tiers up to ~$800/month) and Influee $229–$999/month, each with a marketplace fee on creator payments on top, as checked June 2026 (insense.pro/pricing, influee.co/pricing).
  8. 8.A match score is mostly fit: roughly 50% semantic match between the brief and what a creator makes, 30% structured fit (niche, format, budget, platform), and 20% an audience signal that's deliberately capped — past roughly 500K subscribers a bigger channel stops scoring higher. There is no follower minimum to join, and audience size is never a requirement.