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explainer8 March 2026

Esports Tournament Organizer Earnings: How Much Can You Make?

A realistic breakdown of how much esports tournament organizers earn. Revenue models, example calculations at different scales, and strategies for growing your income as a community organizer.

Rivals TeamBy Rivals Team

The Organizer Revenue Model

Tournament organizers earn money through the organizer fee — a percentage of the prize pool that you set when creating the event. On Rivals, the organizer fee can be anywhere from 0% to 30%, applied after the platform's 10% fee is deducted.

Here's how the math works: Players pay entry fees. The platform takes its cut (10% on Rivals). You take your organizer fee from the remainder. The rest goes to the prize pool. Your earnings scale directly with the number of participants and the entry fee amount.

  • Organizer fee range: 0-30% — most organizers charge 10-20% to stay competitive
  • Platform fee: Deducted first (10% on Rivals), your fee is calculated on the remainder
  • Higher organizer fees mean smaller prize pools — find the balance your community accepts
  • Free events earn $0 but build the community that pays for future events

Example Earnings at Different Scales

Let's run the numbers at three different scales to show what's realistically possible. All examples use a 15% organizer fee on the Rivals platform (10% platform fee).

Small event — 8 teams at $50 entry fee: Gross revenue is $400. Platform fee (10%) is $40, leaving $360. Your organizer fee (15%) is $54. Prize pool for players is $306. Your take-home: $54.

Medium event — 16 teams at $100 entry fee: Gross revenue is $1,600. Platform fee (10%) is $160, leaving $1,440. Your organizer fee (15%) is $216. Prize pool for players is $1,224. Your take-home: $216.

Large event — 32 teams at $100 entry fee: Gross revenue is $3,200. Platform fee (10%) is $320, leaving $2,880. Your organizer fee (15%) is $432. Prize pool for players is $2,448. Your take-home: $432.

  • 8 teams × $50 entry × 15% organizer fee = $54 earnings per event
  • 16 teams × $100 entry × 15% organizer fee = $216 earnings per event
  • 32 teams × $100 entry × 15% organizer fee = $432 earnings per event
  • Running 4 events per month at the medium scale = $864/month recurring income

Scaling Your Organizer Income

The real money in tournament organizing comes from consistency and community growth. A single event earns a modest amount, but weekly events with a growing player base compound quickly. The most successful community organizers on Rivals run 2-4 events per week across different formats and skill levels.

  1. 1.Start with one free event to build your initial player base — aim for 8-16 teams
  2. 2.Move to weekly paid events once you have 20+ consistent participants
  3. 3.Diversify formats: run a casual $25 entry on weeknights and a competitive $100 entry on weekends
  4. 4.Cross-promote with other Discord communities to grow your reach
  5. 5.Track retention: the percentage of players who return for the next event is your most important metric

Organizers who run weekly $50-entry events with 16 teams earn roughly $200-$250 per month from a single recurring event. Scale to 3-4 weekly events with larger fields and entry fees, and $1,000-$2,000 per month is achievable within 3-6 months of consistent organizing.

Getting Started as an Organizer

You don't need experience, a large following, or any upfront investment to start organizing tournaments. You need a Discord server, a game you're passionate about, and a willingness to show up consistently.

  • Add the Rivals bot to your Discord server — takes 2 minutes
  • Create your first free event to test the platform and attract players
  • Book a call with the Rivals team at rivalsapp.com to get personalized onboarding
  • Your first paid event can be live within 7-14 days of starting
  • The Rivals team helps with promotion, format selection, and community growth strategies

The barrier to entry has never been lower. Platforms like Rivals handle all the technical infrastructure — payments, brackets, lobbies, payouts — so you can focus on what actually matters: building a community of competitive players who keep coming back.

Ready to compete? Join a tournament