Josh Peck revealed on the “Financial Tea with Mrs. Dow Jones” podcast that he and his “Drake and Josh” castmates earned far less from the Nickelodeon series than fans might assume, with take-home pay landing around $125,000 a year over the show’s four-year run.
Peck told the podcast’s host that the cast started out making $3,000 an episode on “The Amanda Show” before moving to “Drake and Josh,” which ran 60 episodes total. By the time the show wrapped, the average per-episode rate had climbed to about $15,000.
“So over four years, we wound up making about $900,000, but I think we probably, between agent, manager, and taxes, we cleared half of that,” Peck said.
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With four years of steady work factored in, Peck put the annual take-home figure at roughly $125,000. He noted that the show generated no residuals, a structure he said was standard for kids’ television at the time.
Peck said the cast had little leverage in negotiations because Nickelodeon represented essentially the only outlet for young performers working at that level. The host raised the example of the “Friends” cast negotiating collectively, contrasting it with the “Gilmore Girls” cast, who she said did not negotiate together and were paid less as a result.
“It was a different time and I think it was… there was only one sort of place to do it, right?” Peck said. He added that he and his peers accepted the arrangement because there was no alternative network, streaming platform or other avenue to take the work elsewhere instead.
Peck, who grew up with a single mother and described his family as moving between lower-middle-class and broke, said becoming the household’s primary earner as a teenager shaped a lasting financial anxiety. He said the experience left him fixated on small expenses even after his income grew substantially.
He credited his mother, his accountant and his Big Brothers Big Sisters mentor, Dan, with helping him build long-term financial habits centered on low-cost index fund investing rather than high-risk swings. Peck said he did not purchase a home until his mid-30s, opting instead to maintain a financial cushion in case work became inconsistent.
Peck launched his career as a child stand-up comedian in New York before moving into acting, debuting in the film “Snow Day” in 2000 and joining the Nickelodeon sketch series “The Amanda Show” that same year, where he first worked alongside Drake Bell. He drew critical notice for the 2004 drama “Mean Creek,” and went on to voice Eddie in the “Ice Age” franchise from 2006 to 2016 and Casey Jones in Nickelodeon’s animated “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” from 2012 to 2017. His other credits include “The Wackness,” “Red Dawn,” the Fox series “Grandfathered” opposite John Stamos, the Disney+ series “Turner & Hooch,” Hulu’s “How I Met Your Father” and a supporting turn in Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer.”
Peck currently hosts “Good Guy’s Podcast” and continues to take on acting and brand deal work, which he said he selectively turns down to remain available for his family.