Cooking & Food channels with an audience in India earn an RPM of roughly $0.8 to $1.8 per 1,000 views. That is India specifically, an enormous-volume market where low local ad spend keeps per-view rates far below tier-1 countries. RPM is what the creator keeps after YouTube's 45% cut and the views that never saw an ad, so it is the only earnings figure that reflects real take-home pay.
At that rate, one million monthly views from Indian viewers works out to roughly $800 to $1,800 (about ₹66,400 to ₹149,400) per month from ads alone, before any sponsorship or affiliate income. That is about 20% of what the same channel would earn from a US audience, because the local ad market pays less per view. Use the calculator below to estimate your own channel.
Pre-filled with cooking & food RPM at Indian rates. Type your real monthly views for a realistic range.
Audience country sets the ad rate. A cooking & food view from an Indian viewer is worth roughly 20% of the same view from a US viewer, because an enormous-volume market where low local ad spend keeps per-view rates far below tier-1 countries.
Season swings the number. Q4 advertiser budgets push cooking & food RPM 30 to 40% above the Q1 floor, so an Indian channel earns noticeably more per view in November than in January.
The real money sits past AdSense. Established Indian cooking & food creators lean on cookware affiliates, cookbooks, and brand deals with food companies, which is priced on audience and niche rather than on the local ad rate.
| Country | RPM per 1,000 | Per 1M views |
|---|---|---|
| United States | $4.0 – $9.0 | $4,000 – $9,000 |
| Australia | $3.8 – $8.5 | $3,800 – $8,550 |
| United Kingdom | $3.6 – $8.1 | $3,600 – $8,100 |
| Canada | $3.5 – $7.9 | $3,520 – $7,920 |
| India | $0.8 – $1.8 | $800 – $1,800 |
| Pakistan | $0.6 – $1.4 | $640 – $1,440 |
| Germany | $2.9 – $6.5 | $2,880 – $6,480 |
| Ukraine | $0.9 – $2.0 | $880 – $1,980 |
| Philippines | $0.7 – $1.6 | $720 – $1,620 |
| Indonesia | $0.6 – $1.4 | $640 – $1,440 |
| Nigeria | $0.6 – $1.3 | $560 – $1,260 |
Same cooking & food content, different audience country. The RPM gap is driven by local advertiser spend, not by the channel.
What Indian creators ask before they commit to this niche. Still curious? Get in touch.
A cooking & food channel with an Indian audience typically earns an RPM of $0.8 to $1.8 per 1,000 views, or roughly ₹66 to ₹149 in local terms, which is what you keep after YouTube's 45% cut and un-monetised views. One million monthly views works out to roughly $800 to $1,800 (about ₹66,400 to ₹149,400) a month from ads alone.
AdSense pays in US dollars and your Indian bank converts to rupees, so the ₹ total tracks the USD/INR rate. Payout clears after the $100 threshold, and Google may withhold US tax on the US-viewer share unless your tax info is filed. The RPM figures on this page are the US-dollar amounts AdSense reports, which your bank converts to INR, so the local total moves a little with the exchange rate.
YouTube income is taxable in India as business or professional income, and it also falls under GST once you cross the registration threshold, so many creators register early and keep invoices. This is general information, not tax advice, so check your own situation with a local accountant once the channel earns real money.
At an Indian RPM of $0.8 to $1.8, one million views earns roughly $800 to $1,800 (about ₹66,400 to ₹149,400) from ads. Sponsorships and affiliates usually add more on top, and in a lower-RPM market like this one those extra streams often matter more than the ad revenue.
Within cooking & food, appliance reviews and premium recipe series command the highest ad rates because advertisers in those categories bid the most, and that holds in India just as it does elsewhere. Pair that with mid-roll ads on 8-minute-plus videos to lift RPM further.
Most serious cooking & food creators in India earn more from cookware affiliates, cookbooks, and brand deals with food companies than from AdSense. This matters even more in a lower-RPM market, where the ad rate alone is thin, and a brand deal is priced on audience and niche, not on the local ad rate.
Make globally-framed cooking & food content in English so a real share of views come from US, UK, Canada and Australia viewers. An Indian channel that earns half its views from tier-1 countries can multiply its RPM several times over without changing topic.
At the middle of the Indian cooking & food RPM band, roughly 3,846,000 monthly views gets you to $5,000 (about ₹415,000) a month from ads. Affiliate links and sponsorships can reach it at fewer views, which is often the faster route in a lower-RPM market.