Music dominates YouTube subscriber rankings. Major label channels (T-Series, Vevo-distributed artist channels, label-owned imprints) routinely sit in the platform's top 20, fuelled by music video premieres that pull billions of views.
Beyond the labels, music YouTube includes instrument tutorial channels, music theory and production education, reaction channels, and independent artists building direct-to-fan careers. The economics are very different from other niches: per-view RPMs are low, but the content has long tails (a music video earns for years) and music feeds into Spotify streams, merch, ticket sales, and royalties.
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Per-view RPM is below most categories, but volume is enormous.
Catalog earns for years: a 2016 music video can still drive seven-figure annual streams in 2026.
YouTube is the discovery layer for Spotify and ticket sales, which is where most artists actually monetize.
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Per-view RPMs in music are low (typically $1–$3 per 1,000 views) because much of the audience is mobile, much of it is muted background play, and much of the inventory is short-form. But volume compensates: a music video with 100M views earns roughly $100K–$300K from YouTube ads, plus another $50K–$150K from Content ID matches across user-generated uploads, plus the long-tail flow into streaming royalties and tour ticket sales.
No. Many of the largest music channels of the past decade started independent and either stayed independent or signed distribution-only deals later. What they did need: a clear sound, consistent output (a release every 4–8 weeks), strong thumbnail/title craft on each upload, and integration with TikTok and Reels for new-music discovery.
Content ID is YouTube's system for detecting copyrighted music inside other people's videos. When a creator uses your song, Content ID can either block the upload, monetize it on your behalf, or split revenue. For musicians, this is often a larger income line than their own channel's views, because user-generated content (covers, edits, vlogs using your song) accumulates billions of views over years.
Three lines: (1) AdSense from the lessons themselves (mid-tier RPM, around the YouTube average); (2) course sales (the largest line for established channels); (3) affiliate income from instrument gear, software, and learning platforms. Top guitar and piano YouTube channels routinely earn 5–10x their AdSense from selling their own structured course programs.
Major-label competition for genre-pop categories is overwhelming. Independent music in specific niches is wide open: non-English languages, underrepresented genres (modern blues, neo-soul, instrumental electronic), production tutorials, music history, and music theory. Tutorial and education channels are a much faster path to revenue than original music for most new creators.
Drill into the music leaderboard for one specific YouTube market.