Pricing a Telegram subscription is one of those things that feels complicated but mostly is not. Here is a practical framework.
What are you actually selling?
The value of a paid channel comes down to one question: what does a subscriber gain that they could not get elsewhere for free?
For tipsters, the answer is usually a combination of track record, analysis and time saved. If your tips are genuinely profitable over time and backed by a verifiable record, you are selling a demonstrable financial edge. That is worth real money.
For signal providers, educators and community builders, similar logic applies: the value is either the quality of insight, the exclusivity of the community, or both.
Typical price ranges
From what is working across active Telegram channels:
- £5-£15/month: Entry tier. Often used for introductory or "light" access.
- £20-£40/month: The most common sweet spot for tipsters. High enough to filter out the least committed subscribers; low enough that the ROI is obvious if the tips are good.
- £50-£100/month: VIP or elite tier. Smaller subscriber count, higher commitment.
- £100+/month: Rare in volume, but exists in high-trust signal products with verifiable track records.
The psychological bit
People do not tend to think too hard about £29.99/month. They do think about £30/month. The difference is exactly 1p - but £29.99 feels like a considered number and £30 feels arbitrary. Whether you buy into pricing psychology is up to you, but it is worth knowing it is real.
Bundling
Offering a monthly and a yearly plan is worth doing even if most people pick monthly. Some subscribers will take the yearly option specifically to avoid the recurring "should I renew?" friction. That is not a bad outcome for you.
The best advice
Start somewhere reasonable, see who buys, and adjust. You will find out more in two months of real subscriber data than from any pricing framework. Including this one.