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Can journals that pay peer reviewers succeed?

Professor who set up publisher four years ago to redirect revenue to those doing quality control says it has been an ‘uphill battle’

Published on
April 10, 2026
Last updated
April 10, 2026
Man searching using money as binoculars. To illustrate whether journals that pay peer reviewers can succeed.
Source: stevecoleimages/Getty Images

Four years ago, Jonas R. Kunst founded an academic publisher with a novel concept: pay the academics who do the peer reviewing and editing. It’s a model that remains vanishingly rare in a sector dominated by for-profit publishers that generally rely on the goodwill of researchers to function.

 was born out of a desire to close the gap between who does the work and who reaps the financial awards, said Kunst, professor of cultural and community psychology at the University of Oslo who launched the publisher after 15 years working as an academic. It currently has one open-access journal that publishes work in the field of psychology.

“We wanted to stop complaining about this issue and build an alternative and demonstrate that this model is viable,” Kunst said. 

The peer review system has been around since the 17th century, and yet the fundamental economics of it have not changed much.

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“The profits generated by the free labour of academics is staggering. Big publishers generate billions in revenue,” Kunst said. “At the same time, academics are often doing this work outside paid hours, on top of teaching, grant applications, administration and their own research. Our model simply redirects revenues that would otherwise flow to publisher profits back to the researchers who do the quality control work.”

The model is straightforward – the journal charges authors an Article Processing Charge (APC) of £1,950, paid after acceptance, typically covered by funders, institutions or grant money. That revenue funds compensation for both editors and peer reviewers, who receive $100 (£75) per review. The journal has a rejection rate of roughly 60 per cent. 

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Since its launch, the platform has published 50 papers and attracted more than 500 registered reviewers, without paid advertising. Kunst says although the reaction in the academic community has mostly been positive, establishing the journal has been an “uphill battle”. 

The biggest challenge has not been attracting reviewers. It’s convincing authors to take the risk. Academic careers are still heavily shaped by prestige and metrics. New journals start without an impact factor, an indicator that measures citation rates, making them a harder sell, especially for early career academics trying to build a track record.

“It’s a bit risky for researchers who are not tenured, who need to build a track record, to publish in journals that are not known among their colleagues yet,” he explained. “We now have both more established researchers such as tenured ones and also younger, idealistic ones who felt this was the right thing to do have taken the risk.”

The criticism has also been persistent. Critics of paid review have argued that introducing money into the process could distort incentives, encouraging speed over scrutiny or making peer review feel transactional.

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“The current system of unpaid reviews is what undermines standards,” Kunst argues. “It produces late reviews, thin reviews, low-quality work, and it excludes large segments of the research community who simply can’t afford to work for free, particularly those in less privileged countries.”

Kunst also sees it as an equity issue. Scholars in less privileged regions might be less able to absorb unpaid academic labour, meaning the current system risks excluding voices from outside the West. 

“The forces against us are very large,” Kunst acknowledges. “We’re talking about a profitable, well-positioned industry that has no interest in changing.”

seher.asaf@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (10)

I do think that this is the way forward, especially in terms of current circumstances. Also it's a matter of natural justice in my view, especially when you look at the costs of these subscriptions and the profitability of the academic publishers. Our expertise and time should receive some reward, especially when pay is increasingly depressed and work load models imposed. It does seem unusual that we are expected to provide this essential service gratis, when it is not something that is a part of our contractual obligations and a task which is not shared equally among colleagues?
Pretty sure many economics journals pay editors and some definitely pay reviewers, including the top ones. And have been for years.
Journal editing (and book series) is slightly different I think as it does count towards Research infrastructure and REF and also has professional visibility in particular research fields so there are non monetary rewards and it maybe be workloaded. And editors are often re-imbursed for their time with an honorarium or something. I am unaware of journals or UK or other international research councils remunerating peer reviewers for their time and expertise but this may happen in some cases. Some acdemic publishers do offer cash or books to peer reviwers for book length studies or proposals I know, but these are usually tokenistic. The wider issue (tangential to this excellent piece) also involves reimbursement for external assessment and endless academic programme reviews which are remunerated but again often at a low level, irrespective of the amount of work. But in my view the rewards for these activities sould be professionally standardised across the board in a professional manner
The actual issue of remuneration or not is a bit of a red herring in my opinion. There should be a serious remuneration to academics reflecting the expertise and time that they expend, given that the supply of expert professional reviewers is diminishing, academic salaries are diminishing, and that these activities are not part one one's contractual duties. Given the huge profits now being made by Elsevier and the like and the massive sums they charge our libraries for subscriptions (actually subsidised by our labour in writing researching, editing etc tc) there should be a fair remuneration for these things.
Yep but if they actually had to pay us a reasonable payment, they would then all move over to AI for peer reviews, I bet.
Yes, ‘tokenistic’ indeed. A tiny cash sum less 40% tax or even 45% does not transform reviewing into a financially worthwhile activity. At least a ‘book token’ is not taxed, but still unattractive if the publisher’s books list is modest/boring! And insult to injury is being expected to use the journal publisher’s clunky IT system to submit the review - with each journal seemingly having a different system!
Paying peer reviewers will always be a non-starter. To make it financially worthwhile for reviewers, the sums involved would wipe out pretty much any scholarly society that self-publishes, and most of those that partner with another publisher. Also, in order to regularise the relationship between the publisher and the peer-reviewer (who now becomes an independent consultant) a formal agreement will be needed, including minimum performance standards etc. that will need to be managed by someone at the publisher. As a result, the publisher will suddenly be faced with thousands of new consultants to manage. There will also need to be a complaints procedure in the event that a poorly performing reviewer is fired and decides to challenge the decision. Then there is the issue of taxes - the publisher will not withhold those from the payments made and so the reviewers will have to declare them for tax by themselves. In places like the UK, where many people do not have to file a tax return (as they are on PAYE) that would require reviewers to become engaged with the tax authorities in a way they never had. This is just scratching the service. In many discussions about paying reviewers the focus is always on the amounts of money involved. That's a very valid point of course, but there are also a lot of organizational issues that get in the way.
Well the probem is as i see it, the older forms of obligation are now evaporating as workloads rise, pay stagnates, academics posts disappear, and academic publishing becomes more commercialised with more journals and more databases via subscription models etc etc. So paying people for their labour might become necessary. Anecdotally, I am told that finding reviewers is becoming harder and harder (is tis true) and I am told journals are pressured to produced more numbers each year to increase subscription. Ultimately academics will just vote with their feet and not do the work. There are other models to do this besides the consultancy one, and indeed, it already happens. As for there being no money in the system, yes I uderstand this is difficult for self publishing societies with their archaic business models, but if the academic publishing sector is so financially tight, why are journal subscriptions so high and Elsevier's parent company reporting 10% rise in profit, to £3.2bn in 2025. Should not at least a little of that surplus be used to reward some of the labour that has creared the wealth? You make large profits by reducing costs. Having people work for free is one way of doing it. And wile we are on this matter, I don;t see why cademics external examining etc can't be paid properly. Universities pay senior mabangement large sums and award annual bonus as well. Plenty of money in the system for that!
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"Then there is the issue of taxes - the publisher will not withhold those from the payments made and so the reviewers will have to declare them for tax by themselves". Yes of course income is taxed and any earnings such as literary earnings, royalties, etc etc should be declared. No-one is arguing these earnings should be tax free, at lest you will get 75% or 60% of the payment rather than nothing!!
I also tend to think that the way the systems are set up, that peer reviewers are encouraged to act not so much as reviewers but as part of the preparation process. It's not publish or not, but what reveisions need to made, in whch the reviewer becomes more of an expert mentor with their advice. Then if you suggest revisions etc, they want you to check the revisions etc later, so it keeps coming back. We become part of the APC process for which they levy a charge, yet we don't receive remuneration for our input into the quality of the research. I also think that the external examining role has expanded somewhat almost to be a part of the supervisory system, in which the external is almost looking at a draft and indicating what revisions are needed for doctoral students, and as a consultatant for undergraduate programmes. But the honorarium remains fixed even tho they want to reform and upgrade the current arrangements and make them more professional. Do others see it this way or is it just me?

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