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StudyDaddy Cost Me $3,000 — Why Writers Need to Think Twice Before Working There A warning from a writer who was there for nearly a decade.- Tutor Elite2 I started writing on StudyDaddy.com back in 20
StudyDaddy Cost Me $3,000 — Why Writers Need to Think Twice Before Working There
A warning from a writer who was there for nearly a decade.- Tutor Elite2
I started writing on StudyDaddy.com back in 2016. For years, I built a strong reputation on the platform under my profile, Tutor Elite2 ( https://shorturl.at/9X1dt ) . At my peak, I was pulling in $2,000–$3,500 a month — answering assignment questions and publishing tutorials, which alone brought in another $600–$800 a month on top of that. I'm not exaggerating when I say I worked hard for that money. And StudyDaddy made sure to take their cut: a flat 50% of everything I earned, every single time.
I accepted that cut as the cost of doing business on their platform. What I did not accept — and what every writer considering StudyDaddy needs to hear — is what happened next.
They Blocked My Account and Refused to Pay Me the $3,000 I Earned
When my balance reached around $3,000, I did what any writer is entitled to do: I requested a payout.
Instead of processing it, StudyDaddy refused to pay me. They blocked my account entirely — no explanation, no appeal process, no response to any message I sent. The $3,000 I had earned was never paid out. It's gone, and there was no way to access it or even ask why.
Years of work. Years of building a reputation. Years of taking half of every payment off the top. And when it came time to actually pay out what I'd earned, the platform refused — and cut me off entirely.
This Isn't a Glitch. It's How They Operate.
StudyDaddy is based in Cyprus, which makes it nearly impossible for writers — most of whom are working from entirely different countries — to pursue any kind of legal recourse when this happens. There's no local accountability, no regulatory body chasing them down, and no meaningful way to force them to pay what they owe.
If you're a writer being courted by StudyDaddy right now, or if you're already on the platform and building up a balance, understand this clearly: your earnings on that platform are not safe until they're in your bank account. A balance sitting in your StudyDaddy dashboard is not money you have. It's money they can — and based on my experience, will — simply take away from you the moment you try to claim it.
My Warning to Writers
If you're thinking about writing for StudyDaddy:
- Don't let your balance build up. Cash out frequently and in small amounts. A platform that's willing to block accounts has no incentive to let you walk away with a large balance intact.
- Don't expect support if something goes wrong. Once my account was blocked, there was no communication channel that worked — no support ticket, no email, nothing.
- Don't assume years of good standing protect you. I had been on the platform since 2016 with a strong track record. None of that mattered when it came time to pay out.
- Factor in the 50% cut before you commit your time. Even when the platform does pay, you're only keeping half of what you earn.
I'm writing this not out of bitterness, but because I don't want other writers to go through what I went through — years of hard work, cut in half by their commission, and then erased entirely the moment I asked to be paid what I was owed.
Protect your time. Protect your money. Think twice before you build your income around StudyDaddy.
This account reflects my own personal experience as a writer on StudyDaddy.com from 2016 onward, under the profile Tutor Elite2.