Quorly for Creators
Build credibility. Grow an audience. Earn from content — not from your followers losing money.
Six ways creators earn
Monthly subscriber tiers for premium analysis, newsletters, and private Circles. Quorly keeps 10%.
Voluntary one-time support on your posts and profile. Never attached to a trade, never required for anything.
Ticketed election-night rooms, forecasting workshops, and courses. Quorly keeps 15%.
A share of advertising revenue generated around your content. Quorly keeps 20%.
When a regulated exchange partner is live: the partner pays Quorly a bounty for each verified, funded trader you refer (example: $40) — you receive $15, Quorly keeps $25. The partner, not us, verifies and tracks the qualifying activity.
Sponsored explainers and licensed research reports, always labeled, never disguised as organic posts.
Tips do not affect market pricing, order execution, payouts, or settlement. Tips are not tax-deductible charitable donations unless specifically processed for a verified eligible charity. The tip interface is always separate from any order ticket.
Why there is no cut of the action
Regulators judge payments by what they do, not what they're called. Any payment that is required to trade, scales with a position, or flows from losing traders to anyone else is part of the regulated trading flow — it belongs to the licensed exchange, full stop. That's why creator money on Quorly comes from subscriptions, tips, events, ads, and referral bounties — streams that pay the same whether your audience's forecasts win or lose. This is also why creator earnings here are durable: nothing about them depends on a legal gray zone.
Creator rules — bright lines
- • Payments required to place or view a trade
- • Tips calculated from a trade amount or added to an order
- • Any share of followers' losing positions
- • Payments that only trigger when a forecast wins
- • Calling support a "donation" unless it's for a verified charity
- • Selling "guaranteed" market tips
- • Whether you hold a public position in a market you discuss
- • Whether a campaign, party, PAC, or advocacy group pays you
- • Whether content is sponsored
- • Any financial relationship with an exchange provider
- • Private position size never has to be revealed