What Cooking creators actually earn at 250,000 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 250,000 views, the long-form ad-revenue range typically lands between $1.0K (Tier-3 international, light ad load, low monetized rate) and $3.8K (US-heavy, 8+ minute videos with mid-rolls, Q4 seasonality). The typical payout sits near $2.0K.
- • 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 250,000-view cooking channel video typically add $1.2K–$6.0K on top of ad revenue.
Long-form vs Shorts payout at 250,000 views
If those 250,000 views are pure Shorts, the same cooking channel earns roughly $23 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 250,000 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 250,000 views?
Long-form ad revenue typically lands between $1.0K and $3.8K per 250,000 views, with $2.0K 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.