No-commission gig platforms explained
How they work, what the catch is, and whether they actually make sense for providers
If you’re a gig provider in Australia, you’ve probably heard claims like “no commission” before — and instantly felt sceptical, especially if you’re already tired of percentage cuts from every job.
That reaction is understandable.
Most gig platforms take a percentage of every job, so when providers hear that commission can be avoided entirely, the first question is usually:
“What’s the catch?”
This article looks at whether no-commission gig work is actually possible in Australia, how these models work, and what service providers should realistically expect.
Why commission became the default model
Commission-based pricing didn’t appear by accident.
Early gig platforms needed a way to:
- Monetise quickly
- Scale revenue with job volume
- Avoid charging providers upfront
Taking a percentage of each job was simple.
If a provider earned more, the platform earned more too.
On paper, it looked aligned.
Where commission starts to hurt providers
The problem usually shows up over time.
A commission of 15–25% might not feel painful on a single job, but across weeks and months it adds up quickly.
For example:
- 4 jobs per week at $120 each
- 20% commission
That’s:
- $96 per week in fees
- nearly $5,000 per year
And that’s before factoring in:
- Bidding lower to win jobs
- unpaid quoting time
- paid boosts or visibility tools
Over time, many providers don’t just notice the fees — they become fed up with seeing a percentage taken from every completed job.
So… is “no commission” actually real?
Yes — but it doesn’t mean free.
No-commission platforms simply charge in a different way.
Instead of taking a cut from every job, they usually rely on one (or a mix) of the following:
- Fixed platform fees paid by customers
- Flat access or activity passes for providers
- Predictable subscription-style costs
The key difference is this:
Your platform cost is not linked to the value of the job you complete.
Whether you charge $80 or $300, the fee structure stays the same.
Why some providers prefer no-commission models
For many service providers, especially sole traders, the benefits are practical:
- You keep 100% of your service price
- Pricing becomes simpler and clearer
- Margins are predictable
- There’s less pressure to underquote
Over time, this allows providers to focus more on:
- Service quality
- Repeat customers
- Sustainable pricing
No-commission models tend to suit providers who think long-term rather than chasing volume at any cost.
Are there trade-offs?
Yes — and it’s important to be honest.
No-commission platforms:
- Are usually not “free”
- May not suit providers doing very occasional work
- Rely on transparency rather than incentives
For someone completing one job every few months, a commission model may feel easier.
For someone completing one job every few months, a commission model may feel easier.
Where GigMate fits
GigMate uses a no-commission structure designed around provider sustainability.
That means:
- Providers set their own prices
- Keep 100% of their service earnings
- Platform costs are fixed and transparent, not percentage-based
The aim isn’t to promise “free work”, but to remove the situation where fees quietly increase as providers work harder.
Final takeaway
No-commission gig work isn’t a myth.
It’s simply a different way of structuring marketplaces.
For providers who value:
- Predictable costs
- Fair pricing
- and keeping what they earn
it’s worth understanding how these models work — and deciding which structure actually supports the way you want to run your business.
👉 Want to keep 100% of what you earn?
Explore provider-first platforms like GigMate, built for service providers who want fairer access to local jobs — without commission eating into every job.
