Submitter's Club is back!
Handpicked monthly lists based on your writing.
For those who don't know, we've had this super-secret (i.e. very 2G) membership for a while called Submitter's Club. Members send us their work every month. We read it, do a bit of research, and send them 10 vetted lit mags we think might want to publish it.
Until now, it was done with lots of emailing and spreadsheets. But…tada! Karina made a fancy portal!
How it works:
Every month, you get a credit to submit a new piece.
Fill out our form with all of your details and preferences.
Upload your writing (up to 5000 words of prose, 3 flash, or 5 poems).
Within 3 weeks, get your list of handpicked recommendations as a doc and spreadsheet download.
Unused credits roll over into the next month, so no rush!
Past lists get saved in your panel to revisit whenever you need them.
We include reasonings for each mag we pick plus all of the details you need to submit.
We’re happy to be able to re-open this membership for 100 people (48 spots left). It is $40/m or $400/y and comes with full access to Sub Club, Forever Workshop1, and Chill Subs Premium Tools.
You can find all of the details and explore our new portal here:
→ https://www.chillsubs.com/submitters-club ←
(It doesn’t work on mobile, so if you’re on the go, wait until you get home.)
Thank you for your time! This is just the beginning of what we plan to do now that we have this portal. Yay!
(If you are a yearly Sub Club or Forever Workshop subscriber already, we can offer prorated refunds by request for Submitter’s Club members)





Looking forward to when it can be available on mobile since i work from a tablet 🥹 willing to wait however long it takes, and thank you so much for putting such love into this project. It isn’t every day a writer feels like there’s a whole cheering squad on their side, but that’s what this amazing project feels like. Congrats, guys!
On the one hand, this seems like a great service for time-strapped writers struggling to find the right outlets for their writing.
On the other hand, it tilts publishing ever so slightly further toward writers with actual disposable income, adding to the bias against people experiencing poverty built into submission fees.