Episode 8 of 21
YouTube Estimated Revenue Explained
Understand YouTube revenue metrics — RPM, CPM, estimated revenue, and how YouTube pays creators.
YouTube Estimated Revenue Explained
Understanding your YouTube revenue metrics is essential for growing your channel as a sustainable business. Let's demystify every revenue metric.
Key Revenue Metrics
| Metric | What It Means | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|
| CPM | Cost Per Mille — what advertisers pay per 1,000 ad impressions | $2 – $15 |
| RPM | Revenue Per Mille — what YOU earn per 1,000 views (after YouTube's cut) | $1 – $8 |
| Estimated Revenue | Total earnings shown in YouTube Studio (before final adjustments) | Varies |
| Ad Revenue | Earnings from ads shown on your videos | Varies |
CPM vs RPM
- CPM = advertiser cost. If CPM is $10, the advertiser pays $10 per 1,000 ad impressions
- RPM = your revenue. YouTube takes 45%, so from a $10 CPM, you earn roughly $5.50 RPM
- RPM includes ALL revenue sources (ads, memberships, Super Chat, YouTube Premium)
What Affects Revenue?
- Niche — finance, tech, and business niches have highest CPMs
- Audience location — US/UK viewers earn more than developing countries
- Time of year — Q4 (Oct-Dec) has highest ad spending
- Video length — 8+ minute videos allow mid-roll ads
- Ad types — skippable, non-skippable, display, overlay
Where to Find Revenue Data
- Go to YouTube Studio → Analytics → Revenue tab
- View estimated revenue, RPM, CPM, and top-earning videos
- Filter by date range, geography, and content type
Revenue Optimization Tips
- Make videos 8+ minutes to enable mid-roll ads
- Target high-CPM niches and keywords
- Focus on US/UK/Canada audiences for higher RPM
- Upload during Q4 for peak ad revenue
- Diversify revenue: memberships, merch, sponsorships
Key Takeaways
- RPM is what you earn; CPM is what advertisers pay
- YouTube takes 45% of ad revenue
- Niche, audience location, and time of year affect earnings
- Videos 8+ minutes allow mid-roll ads for more revenue