What Comedy creators actually earn at 100,000 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 100,000 views, the long-form ad-revenue range typically lands between $120 (Tier-3 international, light ad load, low monetized rate) and $600 (US-heavy, 8+ minute videos with mid-rolls, Q4 seasonality). The typical payout sits near $300.
- • 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 100,000-view comedy channel video typically add $180–$900 on top of ad revenue.
Long-form vs Shorts payout at 100,000 views
If those 100,000 views are pure Shorts, the same comedy channel earns roughly $6.00 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 100,000 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 100,000 views?
Long-form ad revenue typically lands between $120 and $600 per 100,000 views, with $300 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 $3.00.
How this calculator is built
Independently maintained
Written by Sam Doshi and the RevenueLab editorial team. We don't sell the data feeds this tool is built on.
Sourced from primary data
Benchmarks come from public AdSense / Stripe / IRS disclosures and reader-submitted data — never third-party "$X per view" claims. Full methodology.
Last reviewed
June 2026. We re-check every figure on the platform on a rolling quarterly cycle.
Editorial standards
See our editorial policy and disclaimer. Results are estimates, not advice.