YouTube Revenue Per View Calculator
See exactly how much YouTube pays per 1 view, 1,000 views, and 1 million views. Compare earnings across 15 niches and 22 countries. Updated for 2026.
YouTube pays creators between $0.001 and $0.030 per view, depending on niche, audience country, and content type. For 1,000 views, creators earn $1 to $30 (known as RPM). For 1 million views, earnings range from $1,000 to $30,000. This free calculator from CollabPals shows exact per-view revenue estimates across 15 content niches and 22 countries, with a Shorts vs regular video comparison. No signup required.
How Much Does YouTube Pay Per View?
YouTube does not pay a flat rate per view. Instead, earnings depend on several factors: the ads shown on your videos, your audience's geographic location, your content niche, and whether viewers watch regular videos or Shorts. The YouTube Partner Program shares 55% of ad revenue with creators, while YouTube keeps 45%.
Understanding your per-view earnings is essential for setting realistic revenue goals and deciding which types of content to produce. A finance creator with US viewers earns dramatically more per view than a gaming creator with a global audience, even with the same total view count.
Revenue Per View
Most creators earn between $0.003 and $0.015 per view. Finance and insurance niches can reach $0.030 per view with premium US audiences.
The 55/45 Split
YouTube keeps 45% of all ad revenue. Your RPM reflects what you actually take home after YouTube's cut and non-monetized views.
Geography Matters
A view from Norway or Switzerland can be worth 15 to 20 times more than a view from Indonesia or Pakistan, purely based on advertiser demand.
YouTube RPM by Niche in
RPM (Revenue Per Mille) represents what you earn per 1,000 views after YouTube's cut. These are the typical ranges for the most popular content categories:
| Content Niche | Low RPM | Mid RPM | High RPM | Tier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Finance and Investing | $4.54 | $7.56 | $12.10 | Highest |
| Insurance | $3.63 | $6.66 | $10.59 | Highest |
| Real Estate | $3.03 | $6.05 | $9.68 | Highest |
| Technology | $2.42 | $4.54 | $7.56 | Mid-Range |
| Business and Marketing | $2.42 | $4.24 | $6.66 | Mid-Range |
| Education | $1.51 | $3.03 | $5.45 | Mid-Range |
| Health and Fitness | $1.21 | $2.72 | $4.84 | Mid-Range |
| Travel | $0.91 | $2.42 | $4.24 | Mid-Range |
| Food and Cooking | $0.91 | $2.12 | $3.63 | Mid-Range |
| Beauty and Fashion | $0.61 | $1.82 | $3.33 | Lower |
| Automotive | $0.91 | $2.12 | $3.93 | Mid-Range |
| Lifestyle and Vlogs | $0.61 | $1.51 | $2.72 | Lower |
| Entertainment | $0.61 | $1.21 | $2.42 | Lower |
| Music | $0.30 | $0.91 | $1.82 | Lower |
| Gaming | $0.30 | $0.91 | $1.51 | Lower |
RPM values reflect what creators actually take home after YouTube's 45% cut and accounting for non-monetized views (approximately 55% monetization rate). These are US audience rates; use the calculator above to see rates for other countries.
Finance, insurance, and real estate content commands the highest CPMs because advertisers in these industries have high customer lifetime values. A single insurance lead can be worth hundreds of dollars, so advertisers are willing to pay premium rates to reach those audiences.
Technology, education, business, health, and travel fall in the middle range. These niches attract advertisers selling software, online courses, and consumer products with moderate price points.
Entertainment, gaming, music, and lifestyle content tends to have lower CPMs. However, these niches often generate significantly higher view counts, which can compensate for the lower per-view rate.
YouTube Shorts vs Regular Videos: Revenue Comparison
YouTube Shorts earn significantly less per view than regular long-form videos. While regular videos can earn $1 to $30 per 1,000 views, Shorts typically earn $0.01 to $0.06 per 1,000 views through the Shorts revenue sharing program.
Why Are Shorts Earnings So Low?
Shorts have limited ad inventory compared to regular videos. Viewers swipe through Shorts quickly, giving advertisers less time to deliver their message. Additionally, the Shorts revenue pool is distributed differently than traditional ad revenue, resulting in lower per-view payments.
How to Increase Your YouTube Revenue Per View
Understanding the YouTube Revenue Formula
YouTube earnings follow this formula: Revenue = (Views x Monetization Rate x CPM x Creator Share) / 1,000. Here is what each variable means:
This calculator applies all of these factors automatically when you select your niche, country, and content type. The result is a realistic RPM range that reflects what you would actually take home.
For a deeper analysis of your channel's earning potential, try our YouTube money calculator which includes brand deal estimates, membership projections, and a goal planner. You can also check your YouTube channel value based on multiple valuation methods, or use the YouTube CPM calculator to see advertiser-side rates for 40+ countries.