YouTube Money Calculator
Estimate YouTube earnings for videos, Shorts, and global audiences.
Use our free YouTube revenue estimator to calculate earnings per video, per 1,000 views, or per million views. Supports long-form content, YouTube Shorts, and weighted RPM calculations by audience country.
YouTube Earnings Calculator
Enter your monthly views and RPM to estimate your YouTube income. Switch to Advanced Mode for audience-based weighted RPM calculations.
Estimated Earnings
Basic ModeLong-form vs Shorts Comparison
If these 100,000 views were monetized as:
How the YouTube Money Calculator Works
This estimated YouTube income calculator uses RPM (Revenue Per Mille) — the same metric YouTube shows creators in YouTube Studio Analytics. It applies the core formula:
1. Enter Your Views
Input your estimated monthly views. Use your YouTube Analytics data for the most accurate result. The calculator works for any view count — from 1,000 to 100 million.
2. Set Your RPM
Choose an RPM estimate based on your niche and audience country. Not sure? Use Advanced Mode for a weighted RPM based on your audience's geographic distribution.
3. Get Your Estimate
Results update instantly. See monthly, daily, and yearly estimates alongside a Long-form vs Shorts comparison — so you can understand the full earnings picture.
Ready to calculate your YouTube earnings?
Try the YouTube Money CalculatorYouTube CPM vs RPM Explained
Understanding the difference between YouTube CPM and RPM is essential for accurately estimating your YouTube revenue. These two metrics are often confused but represent very different numbers.
CPM
Cost Per MilleCPM is what advertisers pay per 1,000 ad impressions. This is the gross advertiser cost before YouTube takes its share. CPM is set by the advertising auction — it fluctuates based on competition, targeting, niche, and time of year.
- Controlled by advertisers, not creators
- Visible in some analytics dashboards
- Higher in Q4 (holiday ad season)
- Finance, legal niches have highest CPM
RPM
Revenue Per MilleRPM is what creators actually receive per 1,000 total video views — after YouTube takes its 45% revenue share and after accounting for views where no ad was shown. RPM is always lower than CPM.
- The number that matters most for creators
- Visible in YouTube Studio → Revenue
- Includes all monetization types
- Typically 40–55% of CPM
The Rough Conversion Formula
For example: $10 CPM × 40% monetized rate × 0.55 = ~$2.20 RPM
This is an approximation. Your real RPM is in YouTube Studio → Analytics → Revenue tab. Use our YouTube RPM calculator above to estimate based on your own data.
YouTube Shorts vs Long-form Earnings
One of the most common questions creators ask is whether they should focus on Shorts or long-form videos. From a pure monetization standpoint, there is a very significant difference in per-view earnings. This YouTube Shorts money calculator section explains why.
Long-form Videos
- Pre-roll, mid-roll, and display ads
- Higher advertiser intent and engagement
- RPM visible directly in YouTube Studio
- Better monetization per view
- Earns ~50–100x more than Shorts per view
YouTube Shorts
- Revenue pooled across all Shorts creators
- Lower per-view earnings
- Excellent for rapid audience growth
- Requires YouTube Partner Program
- Great for top-of-funnel reach
YouTube RPM by Country
Audience location is one of the biggest factors in your YouTube RPM. Advertisers pay significantly more to target users in high-income countries with strong consumer markets. Understanding YouTube RPM by country helps you set realistic earnings expectations and plan your content strategy.
| Country / Region | Long-form RPM | Shorts RPM | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | $4 – $12 | $0.08 – $0.18 | Highest ad spend globally |
| United Kingdom | $4 – $10 | $0.06 – $0.15 | Second highest English-speaking market |
| Australia | $4 – $9 | $0.06 – $0.14 | Strong CPM market |
| Canada | $3 – $8 | $0.05 – $0.12 | Similar to UK market |
| Europe (avg.) | $3 – $8 | $0.05 – $0.12 | Varies significantly by country |
| Brazil | $1 – $3 | $0.02 – $0.05 | Growing market, lower CPM |
| India | $0.50 – $2 | $0.01 – $0.03 | Massive audience, low CPM |
| Southeast Asia | $0.50 – $2 | $0.01 – $0.03 | Rapidly growing audience |
| Africa | $0.30 – $1.50 | $0.005 – $0.02 | Lower advertiser demand |
Note: These are approximate ranges based on typical creator-reported data and industry benchmarks. Actual RPM varies significantly by niche, engagement, seasonality, and channel size.
Estimated YouTube Revenue by View Count
The tables below show estimated earnings for different view counts using common RPM values. Use these as quick benchmarks to understand how much YouTube pays per 1,000 views or per million views at various RPM levels.
Long-form Video Earnings Estimates
Based on: Revenue = (Views ÷ 1,000) × RPM
| Monthly Views | RPM $2 (low) | RPM $5 (average) | RPM $10 (high) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10,000 | $20 | $50 | $100 |
| 50,000 | $100 | $250 | $500 |
| 100,000 | $200 | $500 | $1,000 |
| 500,000 | $1,000 | $2,500 | $5,000 |
| 1,000,000 | $2,000 | $5,000 | $10,000 |
| 5,000,000 | $10,000 | $25,000 | $50,000 |
| 10,000,000 | $20,000 | $50,000 | $100,000 |
YouTube Shorts Earnings Estimates
Shorts earn significantly less per view due to the pooled revenue model. Here's the YouTube money calculator per million views for Shorts:
| Monthly Views | RPM $0.03 (low) | RPM $0.08 (average) | RPM $0.12 (high) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100,000 | $3.00 | $8.00 | $12.00 |
| 500,000 | $15.00 | $40.00 | $60.00 |
| 1,000,000 | $30.00 | $80.00 | $120.00 |
| 10,000,000 | $300 | $800 | $1,200 |
| 100,000,000 | $3,000 | $8,000 | $12,000 |
For a personalized estimate, use our YouTube earnings calculator per 1000 views above with your actual view count and RPM.
What Affects Your YouTube RPM?
Your YouTube RPM is not fixed — it changes constantly based on multiple factors. Understanding what drives RPM higher or lower helps you make smarter content and channel decisions.
Audience Country
The single biggest factor. US and UK viewers generate 5–20× more RPM than viewers from India or Southeast Asia. Growing a US/UK audience is the fastest way to increase RPM.
Content Niche
Finance, legal, SaaS, insurance, and real estate attract high-paying advertisers and yield $8–$20+ RPM. Entertainment and gaming typically earn $1–$5 RPM.
Watch Time
Longer watch time enables mid-roll ads, increasing revenue per view. Videos over 8 minutes can include additional ad placements, significantly boosting RPM.
Seasonality
Q4 (October–December) has the highest RPM of the year due to holiday advertising budgets. Q1 often sees a 20–40% RPM drop as advertisers reset budgets.
Advertiser Demand
More advertisers competing for your audience = higher CPM = higher RPM. Trending topics and high-value keywords attract more ad spend to your content.
Content Format
Long-form videos earn significantly more per view than Shorts. Live streams and Premieres may also have different monetization characteristics.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about YouTube earnings, RPM, and this calculator.
YouTube pays creators through RPM (Revenue Per Mille), which typically ranges from $1 to $10 per 1,000 views for long-form content. The exact amount depends heavily on your audience's country, content niche, and advertiser demand. US-based audiences tend to earn $4–$10 RPM, while Indian audiences average $0.50–$2 RPM. Your actual RPM is visible in YouTube Studio → Analytics → Revenue tab.
For 1 million long-form views, most YouTube creators earn between $1,000 and $10,000. A channel with a $3 RPM earns around $3,000. A finance or tech channel with $8–$10 RPM could earn $8,000–$10,000. For YouTube Shorts, 1 million views typically earns just $30–$120, since Shorts RPM is much lower ($0.03–$0.12). Use our YouTube money calculator per million views above to estimate your specific earnings.
For US-focused channels, $4–$8 RPM is average and $10+ RPM is excellent (common in finance, law, and B2B tech niches). For channels with mixed global audiences, $2–$5 RPM is typical. Shorts RPM is usually $0.03–$0.12 per 1,000 views. The best way to increase RPM is to create content targeting high-income countries and high-value advertising niches.
CPM (Cost Per Mille) is what advertisers pay per 1,000 ad impressions — the gross rate before YouTube takes its cut. RPM (Revenue Per Mille) is what creators actually receive per 1,000 total video views, after YouTube's 45% revenue share and after accounting for views where no ad was shown. A $10 CPM typically results in $3–$4 RPM for the creator. Always use RPM — not CPM — when calculating your actual earnings.
Yes, significantly. YouTube Shorts RPM typically ranges from $0.03 to $0.12 per 1,000 views, compared to $2–$10+ for long-form videos. This means long-form content earns roughly 50–100× more per view than Shorts. Shorts use a pooled revenue model where a portion of ad revenue from the Shorts feed is distributed among creators. Despite lower monetization per view, Shorts are valuable for growing your audience and subscriber base quickly.
YouTube RPM varies by country because advertisers pay more to reach audiences in countries with higher purchasing power and more competitive advertising markets. US, UK, and Australian audiences command the highest RPMs ($5–$15+) because consumers in these markets have high disposable income. India, Southeast Asia, and African audiences typically generate lower RPMs ($0.50–$2) due to lower advertiser competition and consumer spending patterns. Use our YouTube RPM by country calculator in Advanced Mode to estimate based on your own audience mix.
This tool provides estimates based on typical industry RPM ranges and is designed for planning and benchmarking. Actual YouTube earnings vary significantly based on your specific niche, audience engagement, watch time, ad density settings, and YouTube's actual algorithms. For real, precise data, always check YouTube Studio → Analytics → Revenue. The estimates here should be used as a ballpark reference, not a guaranteed income projection.
Yes. Use our Advanced Mode to enter your audience distribution by region (USA, Europe, India, Other). The calculator automatically computes a weighted RPM based on typical regional earnings rates, giving you a more accurate estimate than using a flat global average. You can find your actual audience geography in YouTube Studio → Analytics → Audience → Geography tab.