A Galaxy on TikTok costs 1,000 coins — about $10.60 for the viewer to send, and roughly $5.30 in earnings for the creator on Android. The gap between those two numbers is TikTok's platform cut: viewers buy coins at full price, but creators only receive about half of that value after coins are converted to diamonds and cashed out. On iOS the creator figure is lower still, because Apple's in-app purchase fee raises the effective cost of coins.
What Is a Galaxy on TikTok?
A Galaxy is one of TikTok's mid-to-high tier LIVE gifts — an animated purple gift a viewer sends during a live stream to support a creator. It sits well above everyday gifts like the Rose (1 coin) or Hand Hearts (100 coins), but far below the top-tier spectacle gifts such as the Lion or the Universe. At 1,000 coins, the Galaxy is a common "big thank-you" gift: expensive enough to stand out in the stream, but affordable enough that regular viewers actually send it.
Like every TikTok gift, the Galaxy is priced in coins — the virtual currency viewers buy with real money. When a viewer taps to send a Galaxy, 1,000 coins leave their balance and the creator is credited on the payout side in diamonds. Understanding that two-currency system is the key to reading its real value — the TikTok gifts guide walks through the full coins-to-diamonds-to-cash pipeline that every gift follows.
How the Galaxy's Value Is Calculated
The Galaxy's value depends on which side of the transaction you are on, because a gift passes through three currencies before it becomes cash.
Coins to diamonds to dollars
- Coins are what the viewer buys. TikTok sells coins in bundles at roughly $0.0106 per coin, so 1,000 coins cost the viewer approximately $10.60.
- Diamonds are what the creator earns. TikTok credits creators in diamonds worth about half the coins spent, keeping the rest as its platform cut.
- Dollars are what the creator withdraws. Once a diamond balance clears TikTok's withdrawal minimum, diamonds convert to cash through PayPal or a linked payout method at roughly $0.0053 per coin gifted on Android — about $5.30 for a single Galaxy.
If you want to run these conversions for any coin amount, the Coins Calculator turns a coin total into a dollar figure, and the Diamond Converter estimates cash from a diamond balance. For a stream's full gift haul, the LIVE Gifts Calculator does the math automatically.
Viewer Cost vs Creator Payout
The single most misunderstood fact about the Galaxy is that its cost and its payout are not the same number.
| Perspective | Amount (≈USD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Viewer pays (coins) | $10.60 | 1,000 coins at ~$0.0106 each |
| Creator earns (Android) | $5.30 | After TikTok's ~50% platform cut |
| Creator earns (iOS) | ~$3.71 | Roughly 30% lower than Android |
So when a viewer sends you a Galaxy, they spent about $10.60, but you take home about $5.30 on Android. TikTok retains the difference. This is why headline gift prices always overstate creator income — the platform cut is baked into the diamond conversion before you ever see the money. The Galaxy is a clean anchor to memorize: 1,000 coins ≈ $5.30 in creator earnings on Android.
Android vs iOS: Why the Payout Differs
The device your viewer uses to buy coins changes what you earn. On Android, a Galaxy returns about $5.30 to the creator. On iOS, the same Galaxy returns roughly 30% less — around $3.71 — because Apple takes a cut on the coin purchase itself, which shrinks the value that flows through to diamonds.
The practical takeaway: if your audience skews toward iPhone users, build the ~30% reduction into your revenue targets so your forecasts stay realistic. A stream that looks like it earned $53 in Galaxies from Android gifters would return closer to $37 if those same gifts came from iOS. It is the same gift and the same coin count — only the effective payout changes.
How a Galaxy Compares to Other Big Gifts
The Galaxy is a large gift, but it is nowhere near the top of TikTok's catalog. Here is where it sits among the popular high-value gifts:
| Gift | Coins | Viewer pays (≈USD) | Creator earns (Android, ≈USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Galaxy | 1,000 | $10.60 | $5.30 |
| Drama Queen | 5,000 | $53.00 | $26.50 |
| Lion | 29,999 | $318.00 | $159.00 |
| Universe | 34,999 | $371.00 | $185.50 |
A Lion costs about 30 Galaxies' worth of coins, and a Universe — TikTok's flagship gift — costs nearly 35 times as much. For most creators, Galaxies arrive far more often than Lions or Universes, so they tend to make up a larger share of everyday LIVE income even though each one is worth less. For the complete gift-by-gift breakdown, see the TikTok LIVE Gifts Value Chart.
TikTok updates its gift catalog and coin pricing periodically, so treat every figure here as a planning estimate and confirm current values in the app before you rely on them.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much is a Galaxy worth on TikTok?
A Galaxy is worth about $5.30 in creator earnings on Android and roughly $3.71 on iOS, after TikTok's platform cut. Its face value to the viewer is about $10.60 — the price of the 1,000 coins needed to send it.
How much does a Galaxy cost on TikTok?
A Galaxy costs 1,000 coins, which is approximately $10.60 for a viewer to buy at TikTok's typical rate of about $0.0106 per coin. The exact price varies slightly with the coin bundle purchased and any promotions TikTok is running.
What is a Galaxy on TikTok?
A Galaxy is a 1,000-coin animated LIVE gift that viewers send to creators during live streams. It is a mid-to-high tier gift — much larger than a Rose or Hand Hearts, but a small fraction of the cost of top-tier gifts like the Lion or Universe.
Why do I earn less than the Galaxy costs?
Because TikTok keeps roughly 50% of a gift's coin value as its platform cut before converting the rest into the diamonds you cash out. A Galaxy that costs a viewer $10.60 returns about $5.30 to you on Android, and less on iOS due to Apple's in-app purchase fee.
How do I calculate my TikTok gift earnings?
Use the LIVE Gifts Calculator to estimate a stream's total payout, the Coins Calculator to convert any coin amount to dollars, and the Diamond Converter to turn an existing diamond balance into an estimated withdrawal.