Cooking & Food channels with an audience in the United States earn an RPM of roughly $4.0 to $9.0 per 1,000 views. That is the United States specifically, the single most valuable ad market on the platform, where advertisers pay the most per view. 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 American viewers works out to roughly $4,000 to $9,000 per month from ads alone, before any sponsorship or affiliate income. This is one of the highest-paying audiences on YouTube. Use the calculator below to estimate your own channel.
Pre-filled with cooking & food RPM at American rates. Type your real monthly views for a realistic range.
Audience country sets the ad rate. A cooking & food view from an American viewer is worth close to the platform maximum, because the single most valuable ad market on the platform, where advertisers pay the most per view.
Watch time compounds the rate. Longer average view duration means each American viewer sees more ads, stacking on top of an already high cooking & food RPM.
Niche stacks on top of country. Cooking & Food pays more than entertainment or comedy in every market, so an American cooking & food channel out-earns an American vlog of the same size.
| 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 American creators ask before they commit to this niche. Still curious? Get in touch.
A cooking & food channel with an American audience typically earns an RPM of $4.0 to $9.0 per 1,000 views, which is what you keep after YouTube's 45% cut and un-monetised views. One million monthly views works out to roughly $4,000 to $9,000 a month from ads alone.
YouTube income is self-employment income in the US: you get a 1099 (or handle it yourself), pay federal and state income tax plus self-employment tax, and can deduct gear and software as business expenses. This is general information, not tax advice, so check your own situation with a local accountant once the channel earns real money.
At an American RPM of $4.0 to $9.0, one million views earns roughly $4,000 to $9,000 from ads. Sponsorships and affiliates usually add more on top, and in high-income markets those extra streams often matter as much as 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 the United States 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 the United States earn more from cookware affiliates, cookbooks, and brand deals with food companies than from AdSense. Ads are the floor, not the ceiling, and a brand deal is priced on audience and niche, not on the local ad rate.
Lengthen videos past 8 minutes for mid-rolls, lean into appliance reviews and premium recipe series, and stack cookware affiliates, cookbooks, and brand deals with food companies on top of AdSense. Those move take-home pay more than chasing raw view count.
At the middle of the American cooking & food RPM band, roughly 769,000 monthly views gets you to $5,000 a month from ads. Affiliate links and sponsorships can reach it at fewer views, which is often the faster route at this rate.
It depends on your goal. Cooking & Food sits in the lower half of the RPM table, so at American rates of $4.0 to $9.0 the ad money is modest and the real upside is cookware affiliates, cookbooks, and brand deals with food companies. Volume and a globally-framed angle both help a channel based in the United States.