YouTube Partner Program 2026: full ad revenue needs 1,000 subs + 4,000 watch hours or 10M Shorts views. Early access at 500 subs. Real RPM ranges, no hype.
Last verified · 2026-06-02 · by Moe Ameen
Direct answer: In 2026 the YouTube Partner Program (YPP) has two entry points. Early access lets you apply at 500 subscribers with 3 public uploads in the last 90 days plus either 3,000 public watch hours in 12 months or 3 million public Shorts views in 90 days — this unlocks fan-funding features like channel memberships and Super Thanks. Full ad-revenue sharing (long-form and Shorts) requires 1,000 subscribers plus either 4,000 public watch hours in the last 12 months or 10 million public Shorts views in the last 90 days. You also need an eligible country, no active Community Guidelines strikes, 2-Step Verification, and a linked AdSense account. Verify current requirements on YouTube's Help Center.
If you searched "YouTube Partner Program 2026," you want two numbers settled: what gets you in, and what you actually earn once you are in. This page gives you the real state as of mid-2026 — the official thresholds straight from YouTube's creator docs, and honest payout ranges instead of the inflated screenshots that flood every "make money on YouTube" video.
The single most important thing to understand is that YPP is no longer one gate. There is an early-access tier at 500 subscribers that opens fan-funding tools, and a separate, higher bar at 1,000 subscribers that turns on actual ad-revenue sharing. People conflate the two constantly, then feel scammed when 500 subs does not produce ad checks. It was never supposed to.
Everything below is a 2026 snapshot. YouTube adjusts these numbers and adds regions periodically, so treat the figures here as a starting map and confirm the live thresholds on YouTube's official Help Center before you make a plan around them.
There are two tiers. The lower tier lets you apply and unlocks fan-funding features; the higher tier turns on ad-revenue sharing. You meet a tier by satisfying one full path — Shorts views and long-form watch hours do not add together. Here is the breakdown:
Hitting a threshold does not auto-enroll you — every channel goes through a manual policy review, and acceptance is not guaranteed. The numbers above are the published 2026 figures, but YouTube updates them and expands regions over time, so verify the current requirements on YouTube's official Help Center before you build a timeline around any single number. If short-form is your fastest path, our YouTube Shorts payout guide goes deeper on the Shorts route.
Honest answer: it varies enormously by niche, audience geography, season, and watch time — and anyone quoting you one universal number is selling something. The metric that matters is RPM (revenue per 1,000 views, after YouTube's cut), not the higher CPM advertisers pay. RPM is what actually lands in your account.
Creators on YPP keep 55% of long-form ad revenue. Reported long-form RPMs commonly land roughly between $1 and $8 for general entertainment, gaming, and vlog content, while high-intent niches — finance, business, software, real estate, B2B — frequently report RPMs in the $10–$30+ range because advertisers pay far more to reach those viewers. A US/UK/Canada/Australia-heavy audience earns multiples of the same view count from lower-CPM regions. These are reported ranges, not guarantees; your actual RPM depends on your specific audience and content.
Shorts do not earn a per-view ad rate the way long-form does. Instead, ad revenue from the Shorts feed is pooled, used first to pay music licensing, and the remainder is allocated to creators based on their share of total Shorts views — then YouTube pays out 45% of that allocated amount. The practical result is that Shorts RPMs are dramatically lower than long-form, often reported in the low cents per 1,000 views. Shorts are an audience-growth and discovery engine that feeds your subscriber count and your higher-paying long-form library; they are rarely the main revenue line themselves.
For the ad-revenue tier, the highest-leverage play is a hybrid: long-form videos (8+ minutes unlock mid-roll ad slots and carry the strongest RPMs) paired with a steady stream of Shorts that pull cold viewers in and convert them into subscribers and long-form watch time. Watch time and audience retention drive both your eligibility (the 4,000-hour path) and how aggressively YouTube recommends you, so a tight hook and a reason to keep watching matter more than polish. Consistency beats sporadic uploads — the 90-day windows on the Shorts and upload requirements reward creators who publish on a schedule.
Ad revenue is one line item, and for most channels not the largest. Once you are in YPP — even at the 500-subscriber early-access tier — you can turn on fan-funding tools: channel memberships (recurring monthly support for perks and badges), Super Thanks (one-time tips on videos), and Super Chat / Super Stickers (paid highlights in live chat). These typically carry better margins than ads because they come straight from your most engaged fans rather than from advertiser auctions. Layer in affiliate links, your own products or services, and sponsorships, and ad revenue becomes a supplement rather than the whole business. Eligibility and availability for each feature vary by region — verify on YouTube's Help Center.
The bottleneck for most creators is not strategy — it is producing enough qualifying content every week to clear the watch-hours or Shorts-views thresholds and keep the algorithm fed. Kompozy turns one source recording per week into platform-native exports, including 60–90s Shorts cut and framed for YouTube, captioned inside the safe zone, with no competitor watermarks — content that qualifies cleanly for both the Shorts and long-form monetization paths. Pricing: Founding $39/month BYO key (closes 2026-08-31), Creator $49 / 2,500 credits, Starter $99 / 5,500, Pro $299 / 18,000, and Agency $799 / 55,000. Film once a week, ship across formats, and let the upload cadence YPP rewards take care of itself.
Two tiers. Early access (unlocks fan funding): 500 subscribers, 3 public uploads in the last 90 days, plus 3,000 public watch hours in 12 months or 3 million public Shorts views in 90 days. Full ad revenue: 1,000 subscribers plus 4,000 public watch hours in 12 months or 10 million public Shorts views in 90 days. You also need an eligible region, no active strikes, 2-Step Verification, and a linked AdSense account. Verify current thresholds on YouTube's Help Center.
It depends heavily on niche and audience geography. Long-form RPMs commonly run roughly $1–$8 for general content and $10–$30+ for high-CPM niches like finance and business, after YouTube takes its cut (creators keep 55% of long-form ad revenue). Shorts pay far less — often low cents per 1,000 views. These are reported ranges; actuals vary.
Yes, on their own path. You can qualify for YPP with 3 million public Shorts views in 90 days (early access) or 10 million in 90 days (full ad revenue) instead of the watch-hours requirement. But Shorts views and long-form watch hours do not combine — you must complete one path fully.
The 500-subscriber tier is the early-access entry point that unlocks fan-funding features — channel memberships, Super Thanks, Super Chat — but not ad-revenue sharing. Ad revenue (long-form and the Shorts pool) requires the full tier: 1,000 subscribers plus the watch-hours or Shorts-views threshold.
The 4,000 valid public watch hours are counted over a rolling trailing 12-month window, so they don't expire on a fixed deadline — but hours from more than 12 months ago drop off. The Shorts alternative (10 million views) is measured over a much tighter rolling 90-day window. Confirm the current windows on YouTube's Help Center.
No. Long-form earns a per-view ad share (creators keep 55%), while Shorts ad revenue is pooled, used first for music licensing, then distributed by your share of total Shorts views with creators receiving 45% of the allocated amount. Shorts RPMs are dramatically lower — treat Shorts as a growth and discovery engine that feeds your higher-paying long-form library.
No. Hitting the subscriber and watch-hours/views numbers makes you eligible to apply, but every channel goes through a manual review against YouTube's monetization and Community Guidelines policies. Acceptance is not automatic or guaranteed.