Example Data Table
| Views |
Monetized Rate |
Gross CPM |
Sponsor |
Costs |
Estimated Net |
| 50,000 |
55% |
$4.50 |
$250 |
$120 |
$290.76 |
| 100,000 |
60% |
$6.50 |
$500 |
$250 |
$575.79 |
| 500,000 |
70% |
$8.00 |
$2,000 |
$800 |
$2,950.60 |
Formula Used
Monetized Views = Total Views × Monetized Playback Rate
Ad Impressions = Monetized Views × Ad Impressions Per Monetized View
Gross Ad Revenue = Ad Impressions ÷ 1000 × Gross CPM
Creator Ad Revenue = Gross Ad Revenue × Creator Share
Total Gross Income = Creator Ad Revenue + Sponsor + Affiliate + Membership + Product Income
Net Income = Total Gross Income − Total Costs − Tax Reserve
Net RPM = Net Income ÷ Total Views × 1000
How To Use This Calculator
- Enter the expected or final view count for one video.
- Add the monetized playback rate from your analytics estimate.
- Enter ad impressions per monetized view.
- Add your gross CPM and creator share percentage.
- Add sponsor, affiliate, member, and product income.
- Enter production costs, other costs, and tax reserve rate.
- Press submit to see the result above the form.
- Use CSV or PDF download for saving the report.
Plan Video Revenue With Better Detail
A single upload can earn money from many paths. Ads are only one part. A sponsor can add fixed income. Affiliate links can add tracked income. Members can support the channel. Product sales can also matter. This calculator groups those streams into one estimate. It then subtracts costs and taxes. That makes the final number easier to review.
Why Per Video Estimates Matter
Creators often judge a video by views. Views help, but they do not tell the full story. Two videos with the same views can earn different amounts. Audience location can change ad rates. Topic can change advertiser demand. Longer videos may carry more ad chances. A trusted audience can improve affiliate sales. Careful estimates help you compare ideas before publishing.
Inputs That Change Earnings
The most important ad inputs are views, monetized playback rate, ad impressions, and CPM. Monetized playback rate estimates how many views showed ads. Ad impressions per view estimates ad chances inside the video. Gross CPM estimates advertiser spending per thousand ad impressions. The creator share shows the part kept by the creator after the platform split.
Use The Results Wisely
The final result is not a promise. It is a planning estimate. Actual payments can change because of invalid traffic, limited ads, audience behavior, season, niche, and policy rules. Use a low, middle, and high CPM to build a safer range. Also review the net RPM. It shows estimated profit per thousand views after extra income, costs, and taxes.
Build Better Upload Plans
Use the calculator before recording expensive content. Enter planned production costs. Add a possible sponsor amount. Include expected affiliate or product income. Then compare the profit against the effort needed. If profit looks weak, adjust the topic, budget, sponsor target, or publishing plan. Repeat the estimate after the video ends. Real data will improve future forecasts.
Keep A Clean Record
Download the CSV when you need spreadsheet records. Save the PDF when you need a quick report. Store both with the video title and date. This habit helps you compare old uploads, spot strong niches, and plan budgets with less guesswork. It also makes sponsor talks more organized. Simple records support better channel decisions.
FAQs
What is a YouTube money per video calculator?
It estimates earnings from one upload. It combines ads, sponsors, affiliate revenue, memberships, product income, costs, and taxes into one projected net amount.
Is the result guaranteed?
No. The result is an estimate. Real income can change because of audience location, advertiser demand, invalid traffic, season, niche, and platform rules.
What is CPM?
CPM means cost per thousand ad impressions. It estimates how much advertisers pay before the creator share is applied.
What is net RPM?
Net RPM shows estimated net earnings per thousand views. This version includes extra income, costs, and tax reserve.
Why add sponsor income?
Sponsors can be a major part of video revenue. Adding sponsor income gives a fuller estimate than ad revenue alone.
Why include production cost?
Production cost affects profit. Cameras, editing, travel, actors, tools, and freelancers can reduce the true earning from a video.
What creator share should I use?
Use the platform share that applies to your video type. If unsure, enter your best estimate and test low and high values.
Can I export the report?
Yes. After calculating, use the CSV button for spreadsheet data. Use the PDF button for a simple printable report.