Short-form video is one of the fastest-growing income opportunities for creators in Kenya. But not all platforms pay equally — and for Kenya creators specifically, the difference is significant.
This is an honest comparison of TikTok and Teka for Kenya creators in 2026, based on actual revenue share structures and local advertiser market data.
Side-by-Side: TikTok vs Teka in Kenya
| Feature | TikTok | Teka |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue model | Fixed Creator Fund pool | 50-60% of actual ad revenue |
| Per 1,000 views (KES) | KSh 0.50 – KSh 1.50 | KSh 8 – KSh 18 |
| Minimum followers | 10,000 | None |
| Minimum views (30 days) | 100,000 | None |
| Paid in local currency (KES) | Not directly | Yes |
| Available in Kenya | Partial (Creator Fund) | Fully available |
| Free to join | Yes | Yes |
The Creator Fund Problem
TikTok's Creator Fund is not a genuine ad revenue share. It is a fixed pool of money TikTok set aside, now distributed across hundreds of millions of creators. As the creator base has grown, per-view payouts have continued to fall.
For Kenya creators specifically, the Fund pays especially low rates because it does not reflect the actual value of local advertising inventory. You are effectively competing with US and UK creators for a global pool, while advertisers in Kenya are paying local rates.
💡 The real gap: At 10,000 daily views, a Kenya creator earns approximately KSh 2,400 – KSh 5,400 per month on Teka. TikTok's Creator Fund pays the same creator a fraction of that — assuming they've already hit the 10,000 follower minimum.
The Eligibility Gap
Even if TikTok paid more per view, the eligibility requirements make it inaccessible to most Kenya creators. You need 10,000 followers and 100,000 views in the last 30 days just to qualify for the Creator Fund — and that's before considering geographic availability.
On Teka, there is no minimum. You download the app, post a video, and earn from the first ad that plays. This is a meaningful difference for creators who are just starting out or who have a smaller but engaged audience.
Which Platform Should Kenya Creators Use?
Our verdict for Kenya creators in 2026:
If you're already posting on TikTok, keep doing so for reach and audience building. But if earning income from your videos is the goal, Teka pays meaningfully more per view, pays in Kenyan Shilling, and requires zero follower threshold to start. There is no cost to joining both.
You can cross-post your videos to Teka and start earning in KES from the same content you're already creating. Many Kenya creators are already doing this.
See the full earnings breakdown on the Teka Kenya earning page or browse all supported countries.
Join Teka — Free for Kenya creators
No minimum followers. Paid in Kenyan Shilling every month. Start earning from your first video.