What a 500,000-subscriber YouTube channel actually earns
A 500,000-subscriber channel typically pulls 3,000K monthly views once the algorithm settles — but the spread from low to high is 10× wider than most creators expect.
- • Long-form RPM range: $1.50 (low) → $4.50 (typical) → $18.00 (high)
- • Monthly view range: 1000K → 3000K → 10000K
- • Sponsorship upside: typically 1–5× the ad revenue figure once you actively pitch brands.
How to use this calculator
The calculator above is preloaded with 500,000-subscriber YouTube channel defaults. Adjust the RPM up toward $18.00 if you publish high-RPM-niche content (finance, tech, B2B) to a US-heavy audience. Drop toward $1.50 for Tier-3 international or Shorts-dominant mixes.
FAQ
Is 500,000 subscribers enough to live off YouTube?
Yes for most niches at this scale — even a mid-RPM channel at 500,000 subs typically clears $5K–$50K/month from ads alone, before sponsorships.
How many monthly views does a 500,000-sub channel get?
Typical range is 1000K–10000K monthly views, with 3000K being the most common figure. Shorts-heavy channels skew higher on views but lower on RPM.
Why is my real revenue different from this estimate?
Three reasons cover 95% of the gap: country mix (US/UK/AU pay 5–20× Tier-3), Shorts share of total views (pool RPM is 10–40× lower than long-form), and video length (under 8 minutes blocks mid-rolls and halves RPM).