Cooking payout • 1,000 views · Free calculator

How much does a Cooking YouTube channel make at 1,000 views?

Real ad-revenue estimate for a cooking channel hitting 1,000 views. Live RPM range, niche-specific data table, and a free calculator preloaded with Cooking defaults.

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1,000
1K1M100M
$8.00
$0.01$40$80
80%
LowAvgHigh
$0
$0$25K$50K

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Scenario modelling

Biggest revenue lever

Right now, +20% volume has the largest modeled impact: $1 more in the primary result.

Lower volumeCurrentHigher volume
RangeResult
Conservative$3
Base case$6
Optimistic$14

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SERP quick answer

What this estimate means

800 monetized views at $8.00 RPM produces $6 before extra income.

ScenarioMonthly revenue
Conservative$4
Base case$6
Aggressive$12
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RevenueLab. (2026). How much does a Cooking YouTube channel make at 1,000 views?. Retrieved from https://revenuelab.fyi/cooking-channel-1000-views
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<p>Source: <a href="https://revenuelab.fyi/cooking-channel-1000-views" target="_blank" rel="noopener">How much does a Cooking YouTube channel make at 1,000 views? — RevenueLab</a> (2026).</p>
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Source: [How much does a Cooking YouTube channel make at 1,000 views? — RevenueLab](https://revenuelab.fyi/cooking-channel-1000-views) (2026).
Formula used

Revenue estimate formula

Most creator and publisher calculators estimate monetized volume first, then multiply by RPM and add non-ad income.

Revenue = (volume × monetized rate ÷ 1,000) × RPM + extra income
YouTube views
1,000
Estimated RPM
$8.00
Monetized view rate
80%
Sponsor + affiliate income
$0
Benchmarks

Typical ranges

SegmentRange
Gaming / entertainment$1–$4 RPM
Education / tech$3–$10 RPM
Finance / software$8–$25+ RPM

Ranges are directional benchmarks synthesized from public creator/platform documentation, ad-market benchmarks, and RevenueLab calculator methodology. Use your own analytics when available.

View benchmark methodology
Answer targets

Fast answers people search before using the calculator

1K views
$6

Quick low-volume benchmark.

100K views
$640

Core payout comparison point.

1M views
$6,400

Viral long-form benchmark.

Low estimate
$4.00
Typical payout
$8.00
High estimate
$15

What Cooking creators actually earn at 1,000 views

Cooking and recipe content benefits from grocery, appliance, and meal-kit advertiser bids — mid-to-high RPMs are typical. For a cooking channel at 1,000 views, the long-form ad-revenue range typically lands between $4.00 (Tier-3 international, light ad load, low monetized rate) and $15 (US-heavy, 8+ minute videos with mid-rolls, Q4 seasonality). The typical payout sits near $8.00.

  • Cooking long-form RPM range: $4.00 (low) → $8.00 (typical) → $15.00 (high)
  • Cooking Shorts RPM (pooled): $0.04 → $0.09 → $0.18 per 1,000 views
  • Sponsorships on a 1,000-view cooking channel video typically add $4.80–$24 on top of ad revenue.

Long-form vs Shorts payout at 1,000 views

If those 1,000 views are pure Shorts, the same cooking channel earns roughly $0.09 from the Shorts pool — about 89× 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 Cooking's typical RPM ($8.00) and 1,000 views. Adjust the RPM slider toward $15.00 if your audience is US-heavy and you publish 8+ minute videos with multiple mid-rolls. Drop toward $4.00 if you publish under 8 minutes or your audience is Tier-3 international.

FAQ

How much does a cooking channel make at 1,000 views?

Long-form ad revenue typically lands between $4.00 and $15 per 1,000 views, with $8.00 as the typical figure. Sponsorships and affiliates often add 1–5× on top of ad revenue.

Why do cooking channels earn solid RPMs?

Grocery, kitchen appliance, and meal-kit brands compete heavily for cooking audiences. Long watch times on recipe videos also mean more mid-roll ads per session.

Are cooking Shorts worth posting?

For discovery yes, for revenue marginal. Cooking Shorts average $0.04–$0.18 RPM. Use them to funnel viewers to monetizable long-form recipe content.

What's the difference between RPM and CPM for Cooking 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 Cooking, a CPM of $14.40 translates to a creator RPM near $8.00.

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.