Clippster.gg
Huge volume, music-heavy, mobile-first
Will you get paid?
MixedThis is the honest contradiction worth knowing. Clippster has a strong Trustpilot score (around 4.4 from roughly 99 reviews) and reports huge numbers, over 141 billion tracked views and $6.5 million paid to creators. But there is a recurring complaint pattern in those same reviews: accounts banned right as they hit the $50 withdrawal threshold, video rejections, and view-tracking delays that cost earnings. Most people seem to get paid, but the "banned at the threshold" reports are consistent enough that you should withdraw the moment you can and not stockpile a balance.
What it pays
Set per campaign, commonly $1 to $5 per 1,000 views, with music edits at the higher end. Average advertised RPM across live campaigns sits around $0.80 per 1,000 (it quotes per million views, so figures like "$800 per 1M" appear). New campaigns are added almost daily.
Platforms covered
TikTok, Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts, X (Twitter)
Payout methods
PayPal, USDT (crypto)
How views are counted
Connected social accounts + automated tracking
Followers needed
None; 1,000-view minimum per clip on most campaigns
Minimum payout
$50 withdrawal threshold
Best for
Beginners and music clippers who want high campaign volume and a mobile app, who withdraw early
Pros
- +Huge campaign volume, added almost daily
- +Low 1,000-view minimum (beginner-friendly)
- +Real iOS and Android apps
- +Strong on music and logo campaigns
- +Public campaign board you can browse
Cons
- −Recurring "banned at the $50 threshold" complaints
- −View-tracking delays reported
- −Video rejections cited in reviews
- −Self-reported headline numbers
Our take
One of the largest platforms by raw volume: 65,000 to 100,000+ creators, 141.9 billion tracked views and $6.5 million paid out (self-reported), founded by Turan Selvi. Strong on music and logo campaigns, beginner-friendly with a low 1,000-view minimum, and one of the few with real iOS and Android apps. The honest caveat is the payout-complaint pattern around the $50 threshold, which is why we score payment trust at 3 rather than 4 despite the good headline reviews.