What Comedy creators actually earn at 10,000 views
Comedy and sketch content is broad and entertainment-coded, with frequent demonetization risk on edgy material — keeping RPMs modest. For a comedy channel at 10,000 views, the long-form ad-revenue range typically lands between $12 (Tier-3 international, light ad load, low monetized rate) and $60 (US-heavy, 8+ minute videos with mid-rolls, Q4 seasonality). The typical payout sits near $30.
- • Comedy long-form RPM range: $1.20 (low) → $3.00 (typical) → $6.00 (high)
- • Comedy Shorts RPM (pooled): $0.03 → $0.06 → $0.14 per 1,000 views
- • Sponsorships on a 10,000-view comedy channel video typically add $18–$90 on top of ad revenue.
Long-form vs Shorts payout at 10,000 views
If those 10,000 views are pure Shorts, the same comedy channel earns roughly $0.60 from the Shorts pool — about 50× less than the long-form equivalent. This is why mixed-format channels often see blended RPM collapse when Shorts views dominate.
How to use this calculator
The calculator above is preloaded with Comedy's typical RPM ($3.00) and 10,000 views. Adjust the RPM slider toward $6.00 if your audience is US-heavy and you publish 8+ minute videos with multiple mid-rolls. Drop toward $1.20 if you publish under 8 minutes or your audience is Tier-3 international.
FAQ
How much does a comedy channel make at 10,000 views?
Long-form ad revenue typically lands between $12 and $60 per 10,000 views, with $30 as the typical figure. Sponsorships and affiliates often add 1–5× on top of ad revenue.
Why do comedy channels get demonetized so often?
Profanity, edgy humor, and topical political jokes trigger YouTube's advertiser-friendly filters, dropping affected videos to limited ads (yellow icon) and cutting RPM by 50–90% on those videos.
Do clean-cut comedy channels earn more than edgy ones?
Per-view yes, often 2–4× more, because more advertisers are willing to bid on family-safe inventory.
What's the difference between RPM and CPM for Comedy creators?
CPM is what advertisers pay per 1,000 impressions before YouTube's 45% cut. RPM is what you actually receive per 1,000 video views (including unmonetized views). For Comedy, a CPM of $5.40 translates to a creator RPM near $3.00.