Beauty YouTube RPM: $2–$6 Average
Beauty and fashion YouTube channels earn an average RPM of $2–$6, placing them in the middle tier of the YouTube earnings spectrum. This is higher than gaming and entertainment ($1–$3) but significantly below finance and tech ($8–$20+).
The beauty niche has an interesting duality: while AdSense RPM is moderate, the sponsorship economy is enormous. Cosmetics, skincare, and fashion brands spend billions annually on influencer marketing, and YouTube beauty creators are among the most sought-after influencers in the industry. For many beauty creators, AdSense is secondary income while brand deals are the primary revenue driver.
Beauty Sub-Niche RPM Table
| Beauty Sub-Niche | RPM Range | Key Advertisers |
|---|---|---|
| Skincare / Anti-aging | $3 – $7 | Skincare brands, dermatology clinics |
| Product Reviews / Hauls | $3 – $8 | Retailers, beauty brands |
| Makeup Tutorials | $2 – $5 | Cosmetics brands |
| Hair Care | $2 – $4 | Hair product brands, salon tools |
| Fashion Hauls | $2 – $5 | Fashion retailers |
| Men's Grooming | $3 – $7 | Grooming brands, razors |
| Nail Art | $2 – $4 | Nail product brands |
Seasonal CPM Patterns in Beauty (Q4 Spike)
Beauty channels experience pronounced seasonal CPM variation, mirroring broader YouTube patterns but with additional beauty-specific peaks:
- January–February: Low CPM. Post-holiday, advertisers reduce spend. New Year beauty content still gets views but earns less.
- March–April: Moderate recovery. Spring makeup trends, Easter, Mother's Day start driving beauty advertiser spend.
- May–June: Above average. Wedding season, summer beauty, graduation-related content all attract spending.
- October–December: Peak CPM. Halloween makeup tutorials, holiday gift guides, Christmas party makeup drives intense competition among beauty advertisers for December gifting searches. CPM can be 40–70% above Q1 levels.
Beauty creators should prioritize high-quality content for Q4 — particularly holiday gift guides and seasonal makeup looks — to capitalize on the highest-CPM advertising window of the year.
Why Sponsorships Dominate Over AdSense in Beauty
The beauty industry is the largest consumer of influencer marketing budgets, and YouTube beauty creators are prime sponsorship targets. The economics explain why:
A cosmetics brand can pay a beauty YouTuber $5,000–$50,000 for a sponsored video with 100,000 views — that's $50–$500 per 1,000 views as a sponsorship CPV. This is 10–100× what AdSense pays for the same views. Beauty brands have high margins on products and strong data that YouTube reviews drive purchases.
The "haul" video format — popular in beauty — is naturally sponsorship-friendly. Viewers watch haul videos expecting to be introduced to products, making them receptive to sponsored inclusions without perceiving them as intrusive.
Most established beauty creators earn 70–90% of their total YouTube income from brand deals, with AdSense providing the remaining 10–30% as a reliable but secondary base income.
Beauty Creator Income at Different Scales
Combining AdSense (at $3.50 blended RPM) with typical sponsorship rates for beauty channels:
| Monthly Views | AdSense ($3.50 RPM) | Sponsorships (est.) | Total Est. |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20,000 | $70 | $0–$500 | $70–$570/mo |
| 100,000 | $350 | $1,000–$5,000 | $1,350–$5,350/mo |
| 500,000 | $1,750 | $5,000–$25,000 | $6,750–$26,750/mo |
| 1,000,000 | $3,500 | $10,000–$50,000 | $13,500–$53,500/mo |
The data makes clear that for beauty creators, growing your audience is more valuable for unlocking sponsorship tiers than for increasing AdSense income. Each subscriber milestone unlocks higher-tier brand deals that dwarf the incremental AdSense gain.