How Much Do 1,000 YouTube Views Pay? (2026)
At the average RPM of $3.50, 1,000 monthly views earns approximately $4/month. Here's the full breakdown by niche.
Estimated Monthly Ad Revenue
at average $3.50 RPM Β· 1,000 monthly views
Annual Estimate
$42
Low RPM ($1.50)
$2
High RPM ($8.00)
$8
How Much Does YouTube Pay for 1,000 Views?
1,000 YouTube views generates approximately $4 per month at the average RPM of $3.50. However, earnings vary significantly by niche β a finance channel earns up to $15/month at the same view count, while entertainment channels may earn as little as $2/month.
RPM (Revenue Per Mille) is the amount YouTube pays creators per 1,000 views after taking its 45% cut. In 2026, average RPM ranges from $1.50 for low-value niches to $15-25 for finance and legal content. Your audience's geographic location also affects RPM significantly β US and UK viewers generate 3-5Γ more revenue than viewers from developing markets.
Use our YouTube Earnings Calculator to estimate your channel's income with your specific RPM rate, niche, and sponsorship revenue.
β οΈ Disclaimer: YouTube earnings vary significantly based on audience location, watch time, ad engagement, seasonality, and channel eligibility. These are estimates based on 2026 average data and are for informational purposes only.
What Do 1,000 YouTube Views Actually Pay?
At an average RPM of $3.50β$5.00, 1,000 YouTube views generates approximately $3.50β$5.00 in ad revenue. RPM (Revenue Per Mille) is what you receive per 1,000 views after YouTube takes its 45% share. This varies hugely by niche β finance content can earn $10β$25 RPM, while gaming or entertainment earns $1β$3.
Not all views generate revenue. Ad blockers, very short watch times (under 30 seconds), viewers in low-monetisation regions, and content flagged as not advertiser-friendly all result in unmonetised views. Typically 50β70% of views on well-optimised content actually generate ad revenue.
Geography dramatically affects earnings. A US or UK viewer is worth roughly 5β10x more in ad revenue than a viewer from India or Southeast Asia. If your audience is primarily from high-income English-speaking countries, your RPM will be significantly above average.
Ad revenue is rarely the primary income for successful YouTubers. Sponsorships, affiliate links, merchandise, courses, and channel memberships typically dwarf ad revenue at scale. A creator with 500,000 subscribers might earn $3,000/month from ads but $15,000+ from a single sponsored integration.