Earnings Per View at a Glance

Short-form video monetization is notoriously low on both platforms. Neither YouTube Shorts nor TikTok comes close to matching long-form YouTube's $1–$10 RPM. But between the two short-form formats, YouTube Shorts pays more per view in most cases — especially for creators in the YouTube Partner Program.

Full Short-Form Platform Earnings Comparison

Format Typical per 1K Views Per 1M Views Notes
YouTube Long-Form $1.00 – $10.00 $1,000 – $10,000+ Benchmark — ad auction driven
YouTube Shorts (YPP) $0.03 – $0.12 $30 – $120 Revenue from Shorts ad pool, shared 45%
TikTok Creator Fund $0.02 – $0.04 $20 – $40 Fixed pool; rates declined over time
TikTok Creator Rewards $0.40 – $1.00 $400 – $1,000 Requires 1+ min video, 10K followers, strong watch time

How YouTube Shorts Monetization Works

YouTube Shorts operates differently from long-form YouTube. Instead of placing individual ads on each Shorts video, YouTube pools ad revenue from ads shown between Shorts in the feed, then distributes a portion of that pool to creators based on their share of total Shorts views.

Creators receive 45% of their allocated pool share (compared to 55% for long-form). The result is an effective RPM of $0.03–$0.12 per 1,000 views — very low compared to long-form, but reliably higher than TikTok's original Creator Fund.

For creators already in the YouTube Partner Program, Shorts earnings are automatic — no separate application needed.

Why TikTok Creator Rewards Can Beat YouTube Shorts

TikTok's Creator Rewards Program, for creators who qualify, can pay $0.40–$1.00 per 1,000 views — significantly more than YouTube Shorts' $0.03–$0.12. However, the key word is "qualifying." Only videos that:

  • Are at least 1 minute long
  • Achieve high watch-time completion rates
  • Score high on TikTok's "originality" metric
  • Come from accounts with 10,000+ followers

...receive the higher rate. Short clips under 60 seconds — the core TikTok format — typically earn from the old Creator Fund rates or near zero.

The Strategic Picture for Short-Form Creators

For creators posting sub-60-second content, YouTube Shorts (at $0.03–$0.12/1K) generally outpays TikTok Creator Fund ($0.02–$0.04/1K). The gap is small, but YouTube Shorts also contributes to your YouTube channel's subscriber count and watch history, helping unlock better long-form monetization over time.

For creators willing to produce 1+ minute videos with high production quality, TikTok Creator Rewards can be competitive with YouTube Shorts — and TikTok's discovery algorithm may drive faster view growth to offset the similar rates.

Key insight: Neither YouTube Shorts nor TikTok pays well on a per-view basis compared to long-form YouTube. The real value of short-form content is audience building — use it to grow subscribers who will then watch (and monetize) your long-form content at 10–100x the per-view rate.