Ad revenue on X reportedly fell more than half from its pre-acquisition peak, according to eMarketer estimates. So why are some brands quietly testing budgets back into X Premium Creator Ads? The platform rebuilt its creator monetization stack, and the pitch to advertisers has changed. The question isn’t whether X wants your money back. It’s whether the product finally works well enough to justify sending it.
What Actually Changed in the Rebuild
X’s creator ads system went through a real overhaul, not just a rebrand. The old Creator Ads Revenue Sharing program paid creators based on ad impressions served against their replies, which invited obvious gaming and produced inconsistent brand safety outcomes. The rebuilt Premium Creator Ads framework ties payouts more directly to verified engagement from Premium subscribers, and it gives brands more granular controls over where ads can appear alongside creator content.
Three changes matter most for media buyers evaluating a return:
- Tighter creator eligibility gates. Creators now need sustained Premium subscriber engagement thresholds, not just raw follower counts, before they qualify for ad revenue share.
- Expanded brand exclusion lists. Advertisers can block specific creator categories or individual accounts at scale, something the original system handled poorly.
- Clearer reporting dashboards. X added creator-level performance breakdowns inside Ads Manager, closing a transparency gap that made the first version nearly impossible to audit.
None of this makes X a new platform. But it does mean the conversation with your CFO about reinvestment is different than it was two years ago.
The rebuilt system doesn’t eliminate brand safety risk on X, it just makes that risk visible and manageable for the first time.
The Case for Cautious Reinvestment
Let’s be fair to the platform. X still has real reach in specific verticals, finance, sports commentary, politics-adjacent news, tech, and gaming communities that never fully migrated elsewhere. If your brand lives in those spaces, ignoring X entirely means ceding ground to competitors willing to test the new system.
The economics have also shifted in a way that favors smaller, deliberate tests. Premium Creator Ads campaigns can now be scoped narrowly, targeting specific creator tiers or content categories, rather than the all-or-nothing exposure brands faced before. That granularity lowers the cost of testing. A $15,000 pilot with tight exclusion parameters is a very different risk profile than the blind spend many brands pulled back in prior years.
Agencies running always-on paid social programs are already folding X back into diversified test budgets, usually at 3-5% of total spend, treating it the way they’d treat an emerging platform rather than a legacy channel. That’s a reasonable posture. It’s not a bet-the-quarter move, it’s a hedge.
Where the Reporting Still Falls Short
Transparency improved, but it hasn’t caught up to Meta or YouTube standards. X’s creator-level dashboards show engagement and estimated payout splits, but third-party verification tools remain thin compared to what’s available for YouTube creator takeovers or established TikTok partnerships. Brands running six-figure programs still report needing manual audits to reconcile what X’s dashboard claims against actual impression logs pulled from their own pixel data.
If your compliance team requires SOC 2-level reporting rigor before greenlighting spend, X isn’t there yet. Budget accordingly, and don’t promise your CMO dashboard parity with more mature platforms.
Brand Safety: Better, But Not Solved
This is the section every risk-averse CMO wants answered directly, so here it is: X’s brand safety controls are meaningfully better than they were, but the platform’s baseline content moderation posture remains looser than Meta’s or LinkedIn’s. Premium Creator Ads inherits that environment. Your exclusion lists can keep your ad out of a specific creator’s replies, but they can’t fully insulate your brand from the platform’s broader reputation among your customer base.
That distinction matters for the reinvestment conversation. You’re not just evaluating creator-level risk, you’re evaluating platform-level association risk. Some categories, CPG, family-oriented brands, healthcare, will find that risk harder to justify than others. B2B and fintech brands with audiences already comfortable with X’s culture face a lower bar.
A practical filter: run the same disclosure and compliance audit you’d apply to any influencer channel. If you haven’t standardized that process yet, the framework in our creator campaign ad disclosure audit guide applies directly to X’s Premium Creator Ads context, since FTC disclosure requirements don’t bend based on platform maturity.
How Payout Structure Affects Creator Quality
Here’s something buyers overlook: the payout model shapes who shows up to sell to your brand. X’s rebuilt system rewards creators for driving Premium subscriptions and sustained reply engagement, not necessarily for producing brand-safe, advertiser-friendly content. That incentive structure attracts a specific type of creator, often argumentative, high-frequency posters who thrive on engagement bait.
Compare that to TikTok’s affiliate commission structures, which tie payouts to actual product conversion, aligning creator incentive with brand outcome. The mechanics matter. If you’re vetting X creators for a Premium Creator Ads placement, look past follower count and Premium badge status. Pull their actual reply threads. Read the room they’ve built. It takes twenty extra minutes and it prevents the kind of association risk that no exclusion list catches after the fact.
Where This Fits in a Broader Creator Media Mix
X shouldn’t be your only test in the “underdog platform” category this cycle. Brands running smart diversified programs are testing X Premium Creator Ads alongside other rebuilt or underpriced channels, treating each as a small, measurable bet rather than a strategic pivot. Snapchat’s Spotlight inventory remains genuinely underpriced for Gen Z reach, and Reddit’s ad ecosystem, once you navigate its community trust dynamics, offers a comparable “rebuilding but real” opportunity with arguably clearer moderation standards.
The honest framing for X: it’s one line item in a test-and-learn budget, not a channel you rebuild your creator strategy around. Treat it the way performance marketers treat any recovering platform, small spend, clear KPIs, kill criteria set in advance.
If you’re building out the measurement framework for this kind of test, the agentic governance questions raised in our piece on Ask Ad Manager’s agentic tools are worth reviewing before you hand X’s automated bidding systems more control than your team can audit.
A Practical Reinvestment Checklist
Before moving budget back into X Premium Creator Ads, run through this list with your team:
- Set a hard budget cap for the pilot. Somewhere between 3-5% of total paid social spend is a defensible starting point for most mid-market brands.
- Define kill criteria upfront. Decide what CPM, engagement rate, or brand mention sentiment threshold ends the test, before you launch it, not after a bad quarter.
- Audit creator reply history manually. Don’t rely solely on X’s category tags for brand safety screening.
- Cross-reference reporting against your own pixel data. Treat X’s dashboard numbers as directional, not final.
- Confirm FTC disclosure compliance on every creator partnership, regardless of platform maturity claims.
- Compare against your other emerging-platform tests. If Reddit or Snapchat is outperforming X on the same budget tier, that’s your answer for next quarter’s allocation.
Platforms like Sprout Social and HubSpot both publish benchmark data that’s useful for sanity-checking X’s self-reported performance metrics against category norms. Use them.
FAQs
Is X Premium Creator Ads worth testing right now?
For brands already active in X’s strongest verticals, finance, sports, tech, gaming, a small controlled test makes sense. For brands without existing audience presence there, the reinvestment case is weak enough that budget is better spent elsewhere.
How is Premium Creator Ads different from the original Creator Ads Revenue Sharing program?
The rebuilt system ties creator payouts to verified Premium subscriber engagement rather than raw impression counts, and it adds brand-side exclusion controls and creator-level reporting that the original program lacked.
What’s the biggest brand safety risk with X Premium Creator Ads?
Platform-level reputation risk. Exclusion lists can filter individual creators, but they can’t fully separate your brand from X’s broader content moderation reputation among your customers.
How much budget should a brand allocate to a first test?
Most agencies running diversified test-and-learn programs cap emerging or recovering platform tests at 3-5% of total paid social spend, with clear kill criteria set before launch.
Does X’s reporting match platforms like Meta or YouTube?
Not yet. X’s creator-level dashboards have improved but still lack the third-party verification depth available on more mature ad platforms, so manual reconciliation against your own analytics is recommended.
Next step: if you’re going to test X Premium Creator Ads, cap the pilot budget, set kill criteria before launch, and audit creator reply history yourself rather than trusting category tags. That’s the difference between a smart hedge and a repeat of the last cycle’s wasted spend.
FAQs
Is X Premium Creator Ads worth testing right now?
For brands already active in X’s strongest verticals, finance, sports, tech, gaming, a small controlled test makes sense. For brands without existing audience presence there, the reinvestment case is weak enough that budget is better spent elsewhere.
How is Premium Creator Ads different from the original Creator Ads Revenue Sharing program?
The rebuilt system ties creator payouts to verified Premium subscriber engagement rather than raw impression counts, and it adds brand-side exclusion controls and creator-level reporting that the original program lacked.
What’s the biggest brand safety risk with X Premium Creator Ads?
Platform-level reputation risk. Exclusion lists can filter individual creators, but they can’t fully separate your brand from X’s broader content moderation reputation among your customers.
How much budget should a brand allocate to a first test?
Most agencies running diversified test-and-learn programs cap emerging or recovering platform tests at 3-5% of total paid social spend, with clear kill criteria set before launch.
Does X’s reporting match platforms like Meta or YouTube?
Not yet. X’s creator-level dashboards have improved but still lack the third-party verification depth available on more mature ad platforms, so manual reconciliation against your own analytics is recommended.
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