RPM stands for Revenue Per Mille — "mille" being Latin for one thousand. Your YouTube RPM is how much money you earn for every 1,000 views on your channel, after YouTube has taken their share of ad revenue.
This is the number you see in YouTube Studio under Analytics → Revenue. It represents your actual take-home earnings per 1,000 views — not what advertisers paid, not the gross revenue, but what lands in your AdSense account.
This is the most common source of confusion for new creators. Here is the clear distinction:
| Metric | What it measures | Who it applies to | Typical range |
|---|---|---|---|
| CPM | Cost per 1,000 ad impressions | Advertisers paying YouTube | $5–$50+ |
| RPM | Revenue per 1,000 views | Creators receiving payment | $1–$20+ |
The relationship between them: RPM = CPM × 0.55 × (monetised views / total views)
YouTube keeps 45% of ad revenue and pays creators 55%. But not every view has an ad — some viewers skip ads, some use ad blockers, and some videos have lower ad fill rates. This is why your RPM is always lower than the CPM advertisers are paying.
If advertisers pay a $20 CPM on your videos, and 80% of your views are monetised, your RPM would be approximately: $20 × 0.55 × 0.80 = $8.80 RPM. You earn $8.80 for every 1,000 views, not $20.
Your niche determines which advertisers bid to appear on your videos. Finance and business content attracts premium advertisers willing to pay $15–$20+ CPM. Entertainment attracts lower-paying advertisers at $4–$8 CPM. This single factor can create a 6–9x difference in RPM between two creators with identical audience sizes.
Advertisers pay based on where your viewers are located because purchasing power varies dramatically by country. A US-based viewer is worth 6–10x more to most advertisers than a viewer from a Tier 3 country. If you have 100,000 monthly views but 70% come from Tier 3 countries, your effective RPM will be much lower than a creator with 100,000 views and a primarily US audience.
Advertising spend follows predictable seasonal patterns. Q4 (October to December) is peak spending season — advertisers rush to capture holiday shoppers and spend remaining annual budgets. Q1 (January to March) is the leanest quarter as budgets reset. Your RPM can vary by 30–50% between your best and worst months, even with consistent views.
Videos under 8 minutes can only have one ad placement (a pre-roll at the start). Videos over 8 minutes can have multiple mid-roll ads placed throughout, which significantly increases the number of ad impressions per view and therefore your RPM. This is one reason long-form educational content often has higher RPM than short entertainment clips — more ad inventory per video.
Higher engagement signals quality content to YouTube's algorithm, which attracts premium advertisers. Channels with strong watch time, high comment rates, and engaged subscribers often command higher CPMs than channels with passive or disengaged audiences. Advertisers pay more to reach genuinely engaged viewers.
There is no universal "good" RPM — it completely depends on your niche. Here are the benchmarks by content category:
| RPM Range | Assessment | Typical Niches |
|---|---|---|
| $12–$20+ | Excellent | Finance, business, insurance |
| $8–$12 | Very Good | Tech, health, SaaS |
| $5–$8 | Good | Education, travel, food |
| $3–$5 | Average | Lifestyle, gaming |
| $1–$3 | Below Average | Entertainment, Tier 3 audiences |
| Under $1 | Low | Primarily non-monetised traffic |
Your RPM will fluctuate month to month — this is completely normal. Do not panic if January RPM is lower than December. Track your 12-month average to understand your true baseline.
The most effective RPM improvements come from addressing the five factors above:
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