Travel channels with an audience in Canada earn an RPM of roughly $4.4 to $9.7 per 1,000 views. That is Canada specifically, a high-income market that tracks just under US and UK rates. 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 Canadian viewers works out to roughly $4,400 to $9,680 (about C$6,000 to C$13,200) 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 travel RPM at Canadian rates. Type your real monthly views for a realistic range.
Audience country sets the ad rate. A travel view from a Canadian viewer is worth close to the platform maximum, because a high-income market that tracks just under US and UK rates.
Niche stacks on top of country. Travel pays more than entertainment or comedy in every market, so a Canadian travel channel out-earns a Canadian vlog of the same size.
Video length is the free lever. Pushing videos past 8 minutes lets them carry multiple mid-roll ads, the single biggest RPM upgrade a Canadian travel channel can make without adding a view.
You are paid in US dollars, not CAD. AdSense reports in dollars and your bank converts to CAD, so a stronger dollar quietly lifts your Canadian take-home even when views stay flat.
| Country | RPM per 1,000 | Per 1M views |
|---|---|---|
| United States | $5.0 – $11 | $5,000 – $11,000 |
| Australia | $4.8 – $10 | $4,750 – $10,450 |
| United Kingdom | $4.5 – $9.9 | $4,500 – $9,900 |
| Canada | $4.4 – $9.7 | $4,400 – $9,680 |
| India | $1.0 – $2.2 | $1,000 – $2,200 |
| Pakistan | $0.8 – $1.8 | $800 – $1,760 |
| Germany | $3.6 – $7.9 | $3,600 – $7,920 |
| Ukraine | $1.1 – $2.4 | $1,100 – $2,420 |
| Philippines | $0.9 – $2.0 | $900 – $1,980 |
| Indonesia | $0.8 – $1.8 | $800 – $1,760 |
| Nigeria | $0.7 – $1.5 | $700 – $1,540 |
Same travel content, different audience country. The RPM gap is driven by local advertiser spend, not by the channel.
What Canadian creators ask before they commit to this niche. Still curious? Get in touch.
A travel channel with a Canadian audience typically earns an RPM of $4.4 to $9.7 per 1,000 views, or roughly C$6 to C$13 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 $4,400 to $9,680 (about C$6,000 to C$13,200) a month from ads alone.
Canada is a high-income market that tracks just under US and UK rates. Advertisers bid high to reach viewers with strong buying power and YouTube passes most of that to the creator, so travel RPM sits near the top of the global range.
AdSense pays in US dollars and your Canadian bank converts to CAD, so the loonie figure moves with the exchange rate. Payout releases after the $100 threshold. The RPM figures on this page are the US-dollar amounts AdSense reports, which your bank converts to CAD, so the local total moves a little with the exchange rate.
YouTube earnings are self-employment income in Canada, reported on your T1, with gear, software and part of a home office claimable as expenses. This is general information, not tax advice, so check your own situation with a local accountant once the channel earns real money.
At a Canadian RPM of $4.4 to $9.7, one million views earns roughly $4,400 to $9,680 (about C$6,000 to C$13,200) 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 travel, destination guides and travel-gear reviews command the highest ad rates because advertisers in those categories bid the most, and that holds in Canada just as it does elsewhere. Pair that with mid-roll ads on 8-minute-plus videos to lift RPM further.
Most serious travel creators in Canada earn more from tourism-board sponsorships, gear affiliates, and booking commissions 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.