YouTube Earnings Calculator

Combine ad revenue, sponsorships, affiliates, and channel memberships into a realistic monthly estimate.

Total monthly income
$2,800
Annualized
$33,600
Ad revenue
$2,000
Sponsorships + other
$800

Results are estimates for informational purposes only. Not financial advice.

How to use this calculator

  1. 1Enter your average monthly views.
  2. 2Set your RPM — most channels see $1–$15 depending on niche.
  3. 3Add sponsor, affiliate, and membership revenue.
  4. 4See your projected total monthly and annual income.

What is a YouTube earnings calculator?

A YouTube earnings calculator estimates how much money a channel makes per month by combining the four main revenue streams: AdSense ads served against your videos, sponsorship deals, affiliate links in your descriptions, and channel memberships or Super Chats. Most YouTube income calculators online only show ad revenue based on views — but for any channel above ~50k subscribers, ads are usually the smallest piece of the pie. This calculator lets you model the full income mix so you can see what a realistic full-time YouTube income actually looks like for your niche.

How to use this YouTube money calculator

Start with your average monthly views — use the last 28 days from YouTube Studio for accuracy. Set your RPM (revenue per 1,000 views after YouTube's 45% cut) based on your niche: $1–3 for entertainment and gaming, $3–8 for tech and lifestyle, $10–25+ for finance, business, and B2B. Then add realistic monthly numbers for sponsor deals, affiliate commissions, and memberships or Super Chats. The calculator gives you total monthly and annual income, plus the share coming from ads vs everything else.

How much do YouTubers actually make per 1000 views?

There's no single answer, because RPM varies by niche, geography, season, and content format. Long-form videos in the US about credit cards, software, or insurance can earn $20–40 per 1,000 views. Daily vlogs aimed at a global teen audience often earn under $1.50 per 1,000 views. Shorts pay roughly $0.04–$0.10 per 1,000 views — much less than long-form. Channels with most views from US, UK, Canada, Australia, or Germany earn 2–4x more per view than channels watched mainly in lower-CPM regions. Use this calculator to plug in your own RPM rather than relying on averages.

FAQ

Results are estimates for informational purposes only.