---
title: 'How Much Every Platform Pays per 1,000 Views'
source: 'https://youtube.com/watch?v=AEj0qMmoWvs'
video_id: 'AEj0qMmoWvs'
date: 2026-06-17
duration_sec: 0
---

# How Much Every Platform Pays per 1,000 Views

> Source: [How Much Every Platform Pays per 1,000 Views](https://youtube.com/watch?v=AEj0qMmoWvs)

## Summary

The video reveals exactly how much each major social media platform pays per 1,000 views, based on the creator's own monetized accounts totaling over 1 million followers. It breaks down the requirements to get monetized, typical payouts for long-form and short-form content, and strategies to maximize earnings on YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat, and Facebook.

### Key Points

- **Monetization cheat sheet** [[0:36]] — A downloadable cheat sheet summarizing all platform pay-per-thousand-view earnings is provided in the video description.
- **YouTube Long Form – Highest earner** [[1:28]] — Requirements: 4,000 watch hours in 12 months + 1,000 subscribers. Earnings: $2–$100 per 1,000 views, with an example channel RPM of $47. Factors affecting RPM: niche, audience age, audience location (e.g., US pays more than India), and video length (videos over 8 minutes can run mid-roll ads).
- **YouTube Shorts – Hard to qualify, low per-view pay** [[5:52]] — Requirements: 10 million engaged views in 90 days + 1,000 subscribers. Earnings: $0.10–$0.35 per 1,000 engaged views, with an example 90-day earning of $6,550. Audience location is the main factor; US viewers pay $0.20–$0.35, India viewers $0.01–$0.02.
- **TikTok – High earnings, additional rewards** [[10:18]] — Requirements: 10,000 followers + 100,000 valid views in 30 days + videos at least 1 minute long. Earnings: $0.10–$1.00 per 1,000 qualified views. Additional rewards can double standard payouts, often given for educational, facetime, high-watch-time videos. Example: $2,000 from 1.4 million views ($1.43 per 1,000 views).
- **Instagram – Invite only, low pay** [[16:01]] — Monetization is invite-only via the professional dashboard. Bonuses for reels have mostly been replaced by photo/carousel rewards. Historical pay: ~$0.05 per 1,000 views.
- **Snapchat – Good potential if you get Snap Star** [[19:18]] — Requirements: Get a Snap Star (minimum 50,000 followers). Earnings: Stories $0.05–$0.25 per 1,000 views; Spotlights ~$0.01–$0.02. Example total earnings: ~$2,300 from crystals (1 crystal = $0.10).
- **Facebook – Waitlist, decent pay once accepted** [[21:20]] — Requirements: Public page + 10,000 followers (apply via professional dashboard). Earnings: reels $0.10–$1.00 per 1,000 views. Also possible to monetize photos and run in-stream ads on videos over 90 seconds.

### Conclusion

The video provides a comprehensive comparison of social media monetization rates per 1,000 views for YouTube (long form and shorts), TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat, and Facebook. The creator emphasizes using automation tools like Repurpose.io to easily repost content across all platforms and maximize earnings.

## Transcript

In this video, I'm about to show you how
much every single social media platform
pays you for 1,000 views. And the only
reason I know that this works is cuz I'm
actually monetized on my main account
called Fly Juggler. Across my YouTube,
Instagram, Facebook, Tik Tok, and
Snapchat, I have over 1 million total
followers. And one of my main sources of
revenue has just been how much these
platforms actually pay me per thousand
views as just either a share of ad
revenue or as a reward for doing good
for the platform. And so I've had to
learn from scratch how much each of
these platforms pay you and how it
actually works to get in. But I'm going
to give it all to you for free in this
video. So let's get right into it. Okay,
so firstly, I've put this all together
in a really neat sheet called the social
media monetization cheat sheet. And I've
worked on this in partnership with
Repurpose. More on that later, but
basically this should be in the
description by the time this video is
going out. And it includes all of the
information that I have in this video in
a nice little cheat sheet. So I'll be
using it to show you guys each platform
and go in more depth. But you can always
refer to this cheat sheet if you need
it. Now, I know a lot of you are
thinking about how much you actually get
paid on short form platforms. So, I want
to quickly address the elephant in the
room, which is YouTube long form. And
then everything after I mention YouTube
long form, we'll be talking about short
form platforms and how those platforms
pay per thousand views. So, the way that
this is structured is I'll introduce the
platform. I'll go through the actual
requirements of getting monetized cuz
sometimes it can be really hard to get
monetized. But then once you are
monetized, I'll talk about how much
money it actually pays per thousand
views. And then finally, how you can
increase how much money it ends up
paying you per thousand views. So, let's
start with YouTube Long form. Now, as
far as I know, YouTube long form is
still the highest earning social media
platform out of any platform. And to get
monetized, it's really simple, but it's
not necessarily easy. So, for YouTube
long form, I already have a couple
channels that are monetized from it. And
just to show you guys, this channel that
you're watching this on is already
monetized. And here's the earnings for
this one in the past 365 days, just to
show you cuz I'm transparent with the
channels that I own and how much money
they're making. But basically, to get
in, you just need 4,000 watch hours in
the past 12 months and at least 1,000
subscribers. Now, this seems really
hard, and I will admit it's not easy,
but if you break it down, it actually
can be more achievable than you think.
Because if you need 4,000 total watch
hours, and let's say you can get an
average view duration on your videos of
3 minutes. That's pretty low. If you
made a longer video, you could probably
get higher. But let's say each viewer on
average watches 3 minutes of your video.
That means each viewer is watching for
120th of an hour because 3 minutes * 20
equals 60 minutes which is an hour.
Which would mean that to get 4,000 watch
hours, you actually just need 80,000
views on YouTube long form. But you only
have to hit this within a year. So if
you divide this by 365, you just need
219 views per day on YouTube. If you
post once every other day, that means
that you actually need 438 views per
video. And even though we can all agree
that this is not easy to get, it
definitely is achievable, especially if
you're making highquality videos that
actually answer people's questions like
the ones that I'm making right now for
you guys. You're very welcome. Anyways,
with that in mind, if you get those
4,000 watch hours, it's almost
guaranteed that you'll hit 1,000
subscribers in that time period. So then
the question is really, how much money
do you actually make per,000 views once
you start posting? And you can see right
here, I have left a really, really,
really wide range. My guide here says
that you can make anywhere from $2 to
$100 per thousand views that you get.
And the truth is when it comes to
YouTube long form, it really can vary
that dramatically. And the simple reason
is because the only thing that actually
matters for how much money you make per
thousand views is it's basically just a
share of whatever the advertisers
actually paid to get in front of your
specific video. And how much advertisers
are willing to pay to get in front of
your specific video can depend on a lot
of things, but it really has to do with
how valuable is the audience for you to
get in front of. For example, if you're
posting videos about different private
jets you should consider buying, an
advertiser is going to want to pay a lot
to get in front of a private jet
audience because if someone's about to
buy a private jet and you can just
market to that person, well, you're
going to make probably millions of
dollars from that single sale. So, how
much money would you be willing to spend
to get a million dollars back? Well,
it's going to be a lot of money, but
that also might change depending on how
competitive that is. Like, maybe you
could make a lot of money from selling,
I don't know, headphones as well, but
it's so, so, so competitive with other
companies that also sell headphones that
the amount that you'd have to pay to get
an ad in front of a video about
headphones is also really, really,
really, really expensive, even though
this is much cheaper than a private jet.
So, there's a lot of factors that go
into it and you kind of can't know
exactly in advance, which is why the
variation can be so high. But just to
show you guys a sample. If we look at my
channel, we go to analytics and then we
click on revenue. If we scroll down a
bit here, we can see that my average
amount of money per,000 views in the
past 28 days has been $47
per thousand views. So, that gives you a
rough idea of generally how much money
you'll make from YouTube long- form
videos. Obviously, this can be improved
and it's simply by getting into niches
and demographics that advertisers are
willing to spend more money on. Things
that can affect this is the niche.
Usually, the richer the type of
demographic that uses that niche, the
more amount of money you'll make per
thousand views. But some other factors
include the audience's age. Usually,
older people pay you more per thousand
views cuz they have more money. The
audience location, and you'll almost
always make more from people from
countries like the United States rather
than countries like India because people
from the US have more money. and also
video length. Now, this is the last
thing I didn't mention, which is that if
your video is long enough, and I can go
to an example here, you're actually able
to run ads in the middle of your YouTube
video. Your video just has to be over 8
minutes long, and then you can start
running ads in the middle of your
videos. And the more ads that people
watch on average for your video, the
more money that you'll obviously make
per,000 views. So, if you have a 1-hour
video, I know some people whose RPMs
would have probably been like $2 per
thousand views, but since they have like
a 1 hour video, their RPM is much closer
to like $20 per thousand views. So,
that's how you can increase how much
money you make from YouTube long form.
But now, let's move on to some of the
short form platforms. And next on the
list is YouTube Shorts. Now, to show you
guys, YouTube Shorts is actually one of
the platforms that I've been making a
good amount of money from recently, and
it's from my YouTube channel called Fly
Juggler. You can see I have 170,000
subscribers on here, and some of my most
popular shorts have tens of millions of
views, which is actually kind of crazy
to think about. In the past 90 days,
this has actually made me $6,50,
which is pretty nice. And so let's get
into how to actually get monetized. Now,
the first thing to get monetized that
you need, and this is by far the
hardest, is 10 million engaged views.
And just to specify, an engaged view is
someone who watches your video and
doesn't swipe away immediately. So, just
for an example, if I go to a video like
this that I've posted and I click on
engagement, it'll actually show me what
percentage of people stayed to watch the
video and what percentage of people
swiped away. So only around 80% of the
views actually count here because 20%
swiped away within the first couple
seconds. So it only counts the views
after that. So even though this video
has 158,000 views so far only 100,000
engaged views has been counted. I think
some of this registered like after and
so it hasn't counted all the future
views in yet. But you can see the
engaged views is always going to be
lower than the total views on a video.
Although the thing is you do have 90
days to do this. So that does help but
that's still really hard to do. And then
two, you need at least 1,000 subscribers
on YouTube. Again, if you manage to hit
the 10 million engaged Shorts views,
there's almost no way that you're not
going to hit 1,000 subscribers. So, I
would just focus on getting 10 million
engaged Shorts views as your goal. Now,
when it comes to actually getting 10
million views in 90 days, your goal
should actually be to get almost all of
these views from like one or two videos.
And the way that this works is you
honestly just get one video that pops
off on YouTube and goes mega mega mega
viral. And that basically accounts for
you getting monetized. If you look at my
channel, you can see that's actually
exactly what happened in my case because
it's not like I had, you know, a bunch
of videos, you know, 100,000 views here,
100,000 views there. That's not what
happened. I basically had one video. I
think it might have been this one or
maybe this one. You can see this one got
14 million views. It also might have
been this one. 18 million views. And a
single video like this is enough to push
you over the edge for monetization. And
I think basically one or two videos that
really go very very viral, a lot of
these get like five plus million views.
Putting one to three of those videos in
combination within 90 days is really
what's going to put you over the edge in
terms of getting monetized on YouTube.
That's what you kind of have to hope and
pray for because otherwise you're just
never going to get monetized. So really
just try to get mega outlier videos. Get
one that goes insanely mega viral and
that's how you're going to get monetized
on YouTube shorts. From here, most
people make an average of 10 cents to 25
cents per thousand engaged views. I've
seen it go as low as one or two cents,
but also as high as like 35 cents per
thousand engaged views. And this
actually all depends, and this is pretty
much the only factor that goes into it
is the audience location. That's pretty
much the only thing it depends on. It
actually doesn't matter what niche
you're from or anything like this
because YouTube isn't deciding which ads
to place in front of your specific
video. It's just placing ads on the
YouTube Shorts feed. So, since it's
doing that, it doesn't matter at all
what niche you're posting in. It really
just matters what location are the
viewers actually watching from because
advertisers still pay to get in front of
either an Indian audience or a United
States audience, etc. If your audience
was 100% from India, you'll probably
have a 1 to2cent RPM. If your audience
is entirely from the United States,
you'll probably have a 20 cent to a
35cent RPM. To show you an example with
my channel, let's look at my revenue in
the past 28 days. And if I look at the
shorts that are being posted, I earn
around 23 cents per thousand views that
I post. And if I actually look at my
audience and look at where everyone is
from, you can see this actually aligns
pretty exactly with what I'm saying
because most people are from the United
States. But then I also do have a
significant portion from India and the
Philippines, which is probably bringing
my RPM down. It's always a bit of a
balance though because you can hit more
people if your videos aren't targeted to
any specific language, but you earn less
per thousand views if they aren't
targeted to people who speak English or
are from like the United States. So
yeah, that's how YouTube Shorts works
and how to maximize your earnings from
that. And also understand that how much
money you make per thousand views also
just depends on how much advertisers are
spending in total. So, since advertisers
are usually spending more in quarter 4
than they are in quarter 1, you actually
will probably make more money from the
YouTube shorts that you post in quarter
4 than you will in quarter 1, just cuz
advertisers are spending more money in
those months. Anyways, that's YouTube
shorts. Moving on to the next platform
here, we have Tik Tok. And this can be
an absolutely secret killer cuz it's
been making me a ton of money in the
last couple of months. Now, Tik Tok has
slightly weirder rules and their payouts
are definitely less consistent and less
logical than YouTube's. But if you take
advantage of it properly, its ultimate
earning potential is actually way higher
than YouTube. Now, just to show you guys
with my actual channel. Again, I always
like to have proof of what I'm actually
talking about. This is my Tik Tok
account right here with 295,000
followers. And you can see I have
multiple videos that have hundreds of
thousands and some even have millions of
views. Especially if I sort by popular.
Right here we can see some with 12
million 12 million4 million views. And
if I go to analytics in just the past 60
days, I've made 4,380.
Now what's great is Tik Tok's
requirements are actually some of the
easiest. You just need to have 10,000
followers, which that's probably the
hardest thing. 100,000 valid views in
the past 30 days. That's extremely easy.
If you just post like a couple times a
day, you will hit this no matter what.
Like even if every video you post gets a
thousand views, you could just post a
hundred times in a month, which is
roughly like three posts per day and
you'll still easily hit that. And then
the pretty weird part is that your
videos must be at least 1 minute long.
Now once you hit those requirements
though, you can make around 10 cents to
$1 per thousand qualified views. And a
qualified view is just a viewer that
comes from the for you page is a unique
person. So a rewatch doesn't count. And
the viewer must watch at least 5 seconds
of the video for them to count as a
view. But this 10 cents to $1 is
actually insane because getting a dollar
per thousand views means you're really
really close to just making how much
money you could make from a YouTube long
form video. But it's way easier to get
views on Tik Tok than it is from
YouTube. And getting access to these
higher RPMs is a little bit random, but
I'll walk you through on my phone right
now my understanding of how you can
actually increase your RPM the best. And
it all has to do with something called
additional rewards. Now, you can see
here this is $3,400.
This is how much money I made in the
month of October. And if I click on view
performance, and you can see it shows
two different revenue amounts. It shows
one here called standard reward, which
is $1,600,
and then one here called additional
reward, which is $1,800.
So, I earned basically double what I
should have made from the Tik Tok
additional reward program. And you can
see here, I can view the exact earnings
from each of these separately up here.
But basically, it says here that
additional reward is an extra payout for
well-crafted 1 minute plus videos posted
by creators with specialized content and
is calculated based on video engagement.
And unfortunately, Tik Tok isn't always
specific. Like, it is a little bit
random how much money I make. Like, if I
look under no additional reward and I
scroll, you can see some of the videos
that were recorded the normal way still
said they didn't deserve an additional
reward. But a lot of the videos still do
say additional reward. And often it
comes from when a video has high search
value or high watch time. I mean, these
are things that you should be trying to
do anyways with your videos. But my
understanding is that if you just make
videos that probably include a face in
it and are actually like trying to be
good videos that are educational and
helpful, you'll be much more likely to
actually unlock a reward like this. And
it seems like their algorithm or their
AI that is categorizing which ones
deserve additional rewards and which
ones don't is sometimes a little bit
misaligned and isn't done perfectly,
which is why the sorting is sometimes
wrong. But it does seem like the videos
that are a little bit more legitimate
tend to do better when it comes to
additional rewards. And that's where you
can really make a ton of money. Again,
if I actually look at this month, which
is December, $500 was from standard
reward, but $1,500 was from additional
reward. And if I actually look, this is
from 1.4 4 million views. So that means
this month I made $2,000 off of 1.4
million qualified views, which is
absolutely absurd. That means I'm making
over a dollar per thousand views on the
videos that I'm uploading on Tik Tok.
And this is just really, really good
payment per,000 views. So yeah, that's
how Tik Tok's monetization program
works. Once you get monetized, you can
really make a lot of money from it. And
so I'm a big fan of Tik Tok. And so even
though I'm a big fan of YouTube shorts
because it's very consistent pay and
it's basically the same and there's no
guesswork involved and they stay earning
a little bit longer after you actually
post them, Tik Tok actually has a much
higher ceiling and it's all thanks to
additional rewards. So if you can unlock
that properly, you can make a lot of
money from that as well. Now, the next
platform that I'm going to show you guys
monetization on is Instagram. But if
you're thinking for a second like this
is great, but how am I supposed to post
all of these videos on every single
platform and remember the monetization
rules for everything? Well, luckily
there's tools out there that actually
help you with this. And one of them that
I've been using for the past 3 years at
this point is called Repurpose.io. And
actually, this is the shirt that I'm
wearing. I literally used this software
for so long until I actually ended up
meeting the founders and now I actually
work with them. So, I'm actually also
focused on making Repurpose the best
platform ever. But basically, what it
does for you guys is I'll leave the link
to it in the description. You can create
an account and also unlock the whole
social media cheat sheet guide while
you're at it. But all you have to do is
start for free. It's completely free to
start. You can just create an account
with Google. And then it lets you set up
automations between different platforms.
So for example, the way that I use
Repurpose is I use my Instagram account
as my main social media platform. And
then I have the videos that I post on
Instagram automatically get reposted to
every single other social media
platform. So all of my Instagram videos
get auto reposted to Tik Tok, YouTube,
Snapchat, Pinterest, and X. And also
since I'm uploading within the Instagram
app, they can autoreost to threads and
to Facebook. But yeah, when you see my
actual earnings with like YouTube and
with Tik Tok, this is all with the
thanks of repurpose because this way I
didn't have to manually post to every
platform, which saved me so much time
and made me so much extra money. So when
it actually comes to monetization on
Instagram, there is technically a way to
make money through it, but it's very,
very rare. I'll show you on my phone
since I got really lucky and I'm one of
the few people that has access to this.
But basically, their monetization is
100% invite only. So, if you just post a
lot of videos and you have followers and
Instagram thinks you're legit, they will
just randomly invite you. And you might
not even get a notification. You
actually have to go into your account,
click on professional dashboard, and
then scroll down until you see
monetization. And under monetization, if
it applies to you, you will get
something called bonuses. I already got
it. So, if I scroll up right here,
bonuses is right here. And you can see
right now they're only rewarding for
photo and carousel posts, which is kind
of weird cuz I never post photos or
carousels, so I don't really know
exactly the best way to deal with that.
But if I look at my previous bonuses,
and scroll down, they actually used to
pay you for reels, which I actually did
make a good amount of money from at one
point. Like 1.8K here or $1.4,000 here.
I mean, it used to be really good. Now
it doesn't pay for views on reels at
all. So, it's not really like I'm making
any money from this, but based on my
calculations, it seemed to only pay
around 5 cents per thousand views
anyways. And yeah, I don't know of any
specific way to increase your RPM. So,
that's how it seems to work. But since
Instagram is so unstructured, I wanted
to move to another platform that
actually can make you money and is not
just random. And it's actually Snapchat.
And most people don't know about this,
but you can actually make some pretty
good money from Snapchat. And yes, once
again, to show proof, I actually am
making money from this. I have 350,000
followers on my Snapchat account. You
can see here it's called Fly Juggler.
Pretty obvious. And it is a little bit
complicated to understand. So, I suggest
you actually watch my entire video guide
on it. You can find it in this cheat
sheet. But basically, you have to apply
and get a Snap Star, which the full
guide to is in the sheet right here. But
once you do and you have 50,000
followers as a minimum, you can actually
get the Snap Star and start making money
from what you post. Now, once you start
posting, how much money you make depends
what you post on and how much your
actual watch time is. If you post on
Snapchat stories, you can probably make
around 5 cents to 25 cents per thousand
views. And if you post to spotlights, it
seems to suck a lot more. You probably
make around 1 or 2 cents per thousand
views on Snapchat spotlights, at least
in my experience. Just to actually show
you guys this, I'll show you actual
earnings for me. So, if I go to my
Snapchat crystals, you can see I've
earned 23,000 Snapchat crystals. And
each crystal is basically worth 10
cents. So that's $2,300
basically. And each day I get rewarded
for what I post. So you could see on
December 26th, I got $119 crystals for
spotlight submissions. And then I got
1,567
crystals for what ran on my Snapchat
stories. And just so you know, my
calculation on my RPMs are actually
based on going through this and then
looking at how many views I was actually
getting on my Snapchat stories on the
days when I got rewarded as well as how
many views I was getting on Snapchat
spotlights. You may not know the
difference between those two things yet.
So again, if you don't, you should
probably watch my full guide on it for
the explanation. But just understand
that you should at least be using
Repurpose to autopost your videos to
Snapchat. Because if you do, you at one
point or another will be able to get
monetized on Snapchat and then be able
to make money from the videos that you
post. So, if you can make extra money
from the videos you're already posting,
why would you not do that? I just use
Repurpose to actually just autopost all
my stuff to Snapchat spotlights, but my
main monetization method is through
Snapchat stories. But now, moving on to
the last short form platform that
actually has monetization built into it,
and that's actually Facebook. A lot of
you guys don't know about this, but
Facebook can actually make you money
from just the views that you get. Now,
let's talk about the requirements. So
firstly, you need to have a public page
on Facebook as well as you probably need
to have at least 10,000 followers before
applying. And then once you have it, all
you actually have to do is apply. Now,
just because you apply, that doesn't
mean you'll get in. And I just want to
show you what it actually looks like to
apply because I have 89,000 followers on
my Facebook. If I look at my reels tab,
so the way that you can find this is if
you go to your professional dashboard,
you click under monetization right here,
and then you scroll down, you should see
something called content monetization.
If you click on this, it'll then give
you the opportunity to apply to the
content monetization program on
Facebook, which I already applied to and
I'm on the wait list. I've not been
accepted yet. And when I called Facebook
support, they literally just told us
it's random and you'll get in when you
get in. And it's like that's a pretty
unsatisfactory answer, but sure. So,
luckily though, I do know other people
who are monetized on Facebook and my
understanding is they make around 10
cents to around $1 per thousand views.
And it's a little bit weird cuz you can
monetize across a couple different
mediums. So like you can get monetized
for the photos that you post on Facebook
or also the reals that you post on
Facebook. And you can even run instream
ads apparently on videos that are over
90 seconds. So I don't have all the
details for that right now. But this is
based on talking to people who I know
actually are monetized on Facebook, what
I've seen from them. So again, if you're
not already posting on Facebook, you
should. And if you don't want to do it
manually, you can just set up a workflow
on repurpose. post to your main platform
manually and just get everything on
every other platform for free. So yeah,
just to round this video off though, I
want to go through a couple bonus ways
to monetize since it's just extra money
if you take advantage of these. The
first I've already mentioned in this
video is use Repurpose to autopost your
videos across every social media
platform. This means you can make money
per thousand views on every single one
of those platforms. But on top of that,
if you ever come out with your own
products or services, building your
personal brand across every single
platform is going to make the most
difference. Number two, this one is
currently unavailable, but I made a ton
of extra money using this, and it was
something called Blastoff Music,
otherwise known as music royalties. And
basically, it allowed you to earn extra
money by just putting background songs
on the videos that you already post. So,
this is currently down, but I think it
will be back up eventually. I'm not
sure. And I think when it's back up,
it'll have campaigns across every social
media platform. So, when that's back up,
I'll be making videos about it and
showing you how much money I can
actually make with it. And I'll also
update this doc as well. So, make sure
to subscribe so you don't miss videos
like that. And then for number three,
this is for people with big YouTube
channels. There's a company that I work
with called Linguana and they basically
help you earn extra money by taking your
videos, re-uploading them in an
alternate language for you. You do none
of the work and then they give you 50%
of the revenue. So, if you look at this
very channel, you can see I've been
uploading all my videos in Spanish. I
think this is Portuguese and also
German. And they're all the same types
of videos that I post here, just
completely translated. So, that's made
things really, really easy for me. And
yeah, you guys can do that as well to
make extra money from what you're
already uploading. Last, coming soon,
there are some other platforms that I
haven't touched on here, like X or
Twitter Twitch Rumble Kick Spotify
and MSN. We will be updating this doc as
time goes on once we gather all the info
we need to show the monetization
guidelines on every single one of these.
So, just understand that will be coming
soon. And yeah, that basically wraps up
how much every single platform pays you
per thousand views on social media. This
has been an extensive video undergoing
everything, showing the requirements you
need to hit to get monetized and then
how much money you can actually make per
thousand views and then how you can even
improve that with some bonus ways to
monetize like using repurpose to get
your videos out on every single platform
at once. That's my extensive list. So, I
hope that makes sense. As always, thank
you guys all so much for watching the
video. If you want to join our Discord
community with over 23,000 members, all
dedicated to making money online, that
will be in the description. And once
again, thank you so much for watching.
I'll catch you in the next video. Go in
and peace.
