Definition

RPM (Revenue Per Mille) is a YouTube metric showing the total revenue a creator earns per 1,000 video views. Unlike CPM, RPM reflects your actual earnings after YouTube's cut and includes all revenue sources: ads, channel memberships, Super Chat, and YouTube Premium revenue.

RPM Formula
RPM = (Total Revenue / Total Views) x 1,000

Example: $500 earned from 100,000 views = $5 RPM

RPM vs. CPM: Understanding the Difference

These metrics are often confused but measure very different things:

Metric RPM (Revenue Per Mille) CPM (Cost Per Mille)
Perspective Creator earnings Advertiser cost
YouTube's Cut Already deducted (45%) Not deducted
What's Counted All views Only monetized views
Revenue Sources All (ads, memberships, etc.) Ads only
Who Should Focus On It Creators Advertisers

Example: RPM vs CPM in Practice

An advertiser pays $20 CPM (cost per 1,000 ad impressions).

YouTube takes 45%: $20 x 0.55 = $11 to creator per 1,000 monetized views.

But only 60% of views show ads (due to ad blockers, non-monetized regions, etc.).

Your actual RPM: $11 x 0.60 = $6.60 per 1,000 total views

What Affects Your RPM?

Factors That Influence RPM

  • Niche/Topic: Finance, business, and tech have higher RPMs than entertainment or gaming
  • Audience Geography: Viewers from US, UK, Canada, Australia generate higher ad rates
  • Video Length: Videos over 8 minutes can include mid-roll ads, increasing RPM
  • Seasonality: Q4 (Oct-Dec) sees highest ad spending; January typically drops
  • Audience Demographics: Older, higher-income viewers attract premium advertisers
  • Additional Revenue: Memberships, Super Chat, and merch boost total RPM
  • Ad-Friendliness: Content that's fully monetized (not limited/demonetized) earns more

Average RPM by Niche

RPM varies dramatically by content category. Here are typical ranges:

Niche Typical RPM Range Why
Finance/Investing $15-$35 High-value advertiser competition
Business/Marketing $10-$25 B2B advertisers pay premium rates
Technology $8-$20 Tech companies have large ad budgets
Education $5-$15 EdTech and course advertisers
Lifestyle/Vlogging $2-$8 Broad audience, general advertisers
Gaming $1-$5 Younger audience, high supply of content
Entertainment $1-$4 Very competitive space

How to Increase Your RPM

1. Optimize Video Length

Videos over 8 minutes qualify for mid-roll ads. A 15-minute video can have 3-4 ad breaks vs. 1 for shorter videos, significantly boosting RPM.

2. Target High-Value Audiences

Create content that appeals to viewers in high-CPM countries (US, UK, Canada, Australia) and higher-income demographics.

3. Choose High-CPM Topics

Within your niche, some topics attract better-paying advertisers. "How to invest" pays more than "funny investment memes."

4. Improve Retention

Better retention = more ads watched per view = higher RPM. Focus on keeping viewers engaged throughout.

5. Diversify Revenue Streams

RPM includes all revenue. Add:

6. Make Content Ad-Friendly

Avoid demonetization by following advertiser-friendly content guidelines. Limited monetization drastically reduces RPM.

Pro Tip: Strategic Ad Placement

Place mid-roll ad breaks at natural transition points in your video. Viewers are less likely to leave, and ads perform better. Use YouTube Studio to manually position ads rather than relying on automatic placement.

Tracking Your RPM

Find your RPM in YouTube Studio:

  1. Go to Analytics
  2. Click "Revenue" tab
  3. View "RPM" metric
  4. Compare across videos, time periods, and traffic sources

RPM Myths Debunked

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