What Is the RPM/CPM for Making Money Online on YouTube?

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If you’ve looked into making money on YouTube, you’ve probably seen two confusing acronyms thrown around: RPM and CPM. They sound similar, they both relate to money, and honestly? Most people mix them up.

Here’s the short version: CPM is what advertisers pay. RPM is what you actually keep.

But if you’re trying to figure out whether YouTube is worth your time, you don’t care about textbook definitions. You want to know one thing: how much money will I actually make?

Let me break this down in plain English.

CPM vs. RPM: The Simple Difference

CPM stands for “cost per mille” (mille is Latin for thousand). This is the amount advertisers pay YouTube for 1,000 ad views on your video.

RPM stands for “revenue per mille.” This is what YouTube pays you for 1,000 video views after they take their cut.

Think of it like this: A company pays $20 to run ads on your video (CPM). YouTube keeps about 45% of that. You get the remaining $11 (RPM).

Most people ask “what’s the CPM on YouTube?” when they really mean “what will I actually earn?” The answer to that question is your RPM.

What Actually Affects Your YouTube RPM?

Here’s where things get real. RPM isn’t one number. It changes wildly based on factors you can control and some you can’t.

Your Niche Matters More Than Anything

Advertisers pay more to reach certain audiences. A lot more.

NicheTypical RPM Range
Finance, investing, crypto$10 – $30
Real estate, business$8 – $20
Tech reviews, software$5 – $12
Health, fitness, self-help$4 – $10
Gaming$2 – $6
Vlogging, comedy, entertainment$1 – $4

A finance channel can earn $20 RPM while a gaming channel with the same view count earns $3. That’s not a judgment on quality. It’s just what advertisers are willing to spend.

Where Your Viewers Live

Advertisers pay more for viewers in wealthy countries. A viewer in the US or UK is worth 5 to 10 times more than a viewer in India or the Philippines.

This sounds harsh, but it’s just how the ad market works. If 80% of your audience is from the US, your RPM could be $8. If 80% is from Southeast Asia, your RPM might be $1.50.

Seasonality

Ad rates spike from September through December. Companies blow their annual budgets on holiday shopping. Your RPM in November could be double what it was in January.

Some smart creators save their best videos for Q4 for this exact reason.

Ad Type and Placement

Not all ads pay the same. Skippable video ads pay less than non-skippable ones. Display ads (those banners that show up) pay very little. Mid-roll ads (the ones that interrupt your video) pay better than pre-roll.

Longer videos let you place more mid-roll ads. That’s why you see 10-minute videos with multiple ad breaks.

How to Check Your Own RPM and CPM

Once you’re in the YouTube Partner Program, open YouTube Studio on desktop. Go to Analytics > Revenue.

You’ll see two numbers:

  • Playback-based CPM – What advertisers paid
  • RPM – What you earned per 1,000 views

Most creators focus on RPM because it’s the real number. CPM is interesting. RPM pays your bills.

YouTube updates these numbers about every 48 hours. Don’t obsess over daily changes. Look at monthly trends instead.

Real Numbers: What YouTubers Actually Earn

Let me give you honest, realistic numbers. No guru hype.

Small channel (10,000 views per month)

  • Average RPM: $3
  • Monthly earnings: $30

Growing channel (100,000 views per month)

  • Average RPM: $4
  • Monthly earnings: $400

Established channel (500,000 views per month)

  • Average RPM: $5
  • Monthly earnings: $2,500

Large channel (1 million views per month)

  • Average RPM: $6
  • Monthly earnings: $6,000

Notice how RPM tends to increase with channel size? Bigger channels negotiate better ad deals and often have more loyal audiences that watch longer. Longer watch time means more ads shown.

These are rough averages. Some niches blow these numbers out of the water. Some fall below.

How to Increase Your RPM Without Getting More Views

This is the smart part. You don’t always need more views. You need better RPM.

Make Longer Videos

Videos over 8 minutes let you place mid-roll ads. Videos over 10 minutes let you place multiple mid-roll ads. A 15-minute video with three ad breaks will earn significantly more than a 4-minute video with one pre-roll ad.

Don’t pad your videos with nonsense. Viewers will leave. But if you have real content that naturally runs longer, you’ll earn more per view.

Improve Audience Retention

YouTube pays more when people watch more ads. If viewers click away after 30 seconds, they saw one ad. If they watch 10 minutes, they saw multiple ads.

Hook people early. Deliver what your title promised. Cut boring parts. Every second someone stays increases your RPM.

Target Higher-Value Keywords

Before you make a video, ask yourself: would a business pay to reach someone searching this topic?

“Best credit card for bad credit” – yes, banks pay big money for that.
“What I ate for breakfast” – probably not.

This doesn’t mean make boring videos. It means if you care about ad revenue, steer toward topics with commercial value.

Build a Loyal Audience

Returning viewers watch longer. They sit through ads because they trust you. New viewers are more likely to click away.

Encourage subscriptions. Create series that make people come back. Build community. Loyalty directly increases RPM.

The Honest Truth About YouTube Ad Revenue

Here’s what most courses won’t tell you: ad revenue alone is not a great way to make money online for most people.

A channel with 100,000 monthly views earning $400 is working hard for very little. That’s below minimum wage in most countries.

But here’s the flip side: ad revenue is passive income. Make a video once, and it can earn for years. A video that took 10 hours to make and earns $20 per month will earn $240 over a year. That’s $24 per hour for that one video’s creation time.

The real money in YouTube comes from combining ad revenue with other income streams:

  • Affiliate links in descriptions
  • Sponsored segments
  • Selling your own products or courses
  • Channel memberships
  • Consulting or coaching

Creators who treat YouTube as a lead generation tool, not an ad revenue machine, do much better.

FAQ

How many views do I need to make $1,000 per month?

At $5 RPM, you need 200,000 monthly views. At $10 RPM, you need 100,000 views. At $2 RPM, you need 500,000 views. Your niche determines which number applies to you.

Do YouTube Shorts pay the same?

No. Shorts pay significantly less – often $0.05 to $0.15 RPM. Shorts are great for growing an audience but terrible for direct ad revenue.

Can I control which ads play on my videos?

Partially. You can turn off certain ad categories (like gambling or politics) in your settings. You cannot choose specific advertisers. YouTube decides based on viewer data.

How often does YouTube pay?

Once per month, around the 21st, for the previous month’s earnings. You need at least $100 in your AdSense account to receive payment.

Why did my RPM suddenly drop?

Check three things: seasonality (January is always low), your audience location (did a video go viral in a low-paying country?), and video length (are people watching shorter videos this month?). Usually one of these explains the drop.

The Bottom Line

RPM and CPM matter, but they’re not the full story. A $2 RPM channel with 500,000 monthly views earns the same as a $10 RPM channel with 100,000 views. Both can work.

What matters more is whether you enjoy making videos. YouTube takes time. Most channels take 12 to 24 months to gain real traction. If you hate the process, you’ll quit before the money arrives.

Start with topics you genuinely find interesting. Make helpful content. Pay attention to what works and do more of it. The RPM numbers will take care of themselves as you grow.

And here’s the question I’d genuinely love to hear your answer to: If ad revenue disappeared completely tomorrow, would you still want to make YouTube videos?

Think about that one. Your honest answer will tell you more than any RPM calculation ever could.

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