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🀝 Sponsorship Rate Calculator
Find out what to charge brands for a YouTube sponsorship deal
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How Brands Calculate What to Pay Creators

Most brand sponsorship deals are priced using a CPV model β€” cost per view. A brand agrees to pay a set dollar amount for every 1,000 views a sponsored video receives, typically within the first 30 days of publishing. This is different from display advertising CPM, because the brand is paying for a direct, spoken endorsement rather than a banner impression.

The standard formula brands use internally is: average views per video Γ— CPV rate = flat fee offer. If your last 10 videos averaged 80,000 views and a brand’s CPV is $0.04, their starting offer will be around $3,200. Knowing this formula lets you push back on lowball offers with data instead of gut feeling.

Some brands β€” especially newer ones or those running affiliate-only deals β€” will instead offer a revenue share or commission structure rather than a flat fee. These are rarely worth taking unless the product has a genuinely high conversion rate and your audience is a strong match. Flat fees are almost always better for creators.

Sponsorship Rates by Niche

CPV rates vary dramatically depending on your niche’s advertiser demand and audience buying power. Finance and business channels command the highest rates because their viewers are decision-makers with disposable income. Gaming channels tend to sit at the lower end because the audience skews younger with less purchasing power β€” though gaming hardware and peripheral sponsors are an exception.

Niche CPV Rate (per 1,000 views) Typical Flat Fee (100k views)
Finance / Investing $30–$80 $3,000–$8,000
Tech / Software $20–$55 $2,000–$5,500
Business / Entrepreneurship $20–$50 $2,000–$5,000
Health / Fitness $15–$35 $1,500–$3,500
Education / How-To $12–$30 $1,200–$3,000
Lifestyle / Vlog $10–$25 $1,000–$2,500
Beauty / Fashion $10–$25 $1,000–$2,500
Food / Cooking $8–$20 $800–$2,000
Gaming $8–$18 $800–$1,800
Entertainment / Comedy $6–$15 $600–$1,500

These ranges reflect what brands are actually paying in 2024–2025, not what they advertise publicly. The lower end of each range is what a brand will offer with no negotiation. The upper end is what experienced creators with strong engagement and good pitch decks regularly achieve.

What Affects Your Sponsorship Rate

Average views per video matters more than subscriber count. A channel with 200,000 subscribers but 15,000 views per video will be paid less than a 50,000-subscriber channel that consistently hits 60,000 views. Brands care about reach, not vanity metrics β€” always lead with your average views when negotiating.

Engagement rate is the second biggest factor. A channel where viewers actually click links, buy products, and leave comments is worth significantly more to a brand than one with passive watchers. If your comment-to-view ratio is strong, mention it in your pitch. Some brands will pay a 20–30% premium for high-engagement channels in their niche.

Other factors that affect your rate include:

  • Exclusivity: If the brand wants you to avoid competitors for 30–90 days, that’s worth an additional 15–25% on the base rate.
  • Usage rights: If the brand wants to repurpose your footage in their own ads, charge for it separately β€” typically an additional 20–50% of the base fee.
  • Dedicated vs. integrated: A full dedicated video should cost 2–3x more than a mid-roll integration in an unrelated video.
  • Audience geography: Channels with a majority US/UK/AU audience command higher rates than those with primarily Southeast Asian or South Asian traffic.
  • Niche alignment: The closer the product is to your core content, the more you can charge β€” and the better it will convert for the brand.

The 3 Types of Sponsorship Deals

Understanding the three deal formats helps you price them correctly and set clear expectations with brands before production begins.

Dedicated videos are entirely about the sponsor’s product or service. These are the most valuable format and should be priced at your highest rate β€” typically 2.5–3x your integration rate. The entire production is in service of the brand, so your creative input should be baked into the price, not given away for free.

Integrations are 60–90 second segments inserted naturally into a video about a different topic. This is the most common format. Your video retains its normal structure, and the sponsor gets a mid-roll or pre-roll mention. Price these at your standard CPV-based rate.

End cards are 15–30 second mentions at the end of a video, usually with a link in the description. These are the lowest-value format β€” price them at roughly 25–40% of your integration rate. They work well for SaaS products with long sales cycles where the brand just wants awareness, not immediate conversion.

How to Pitch Brands and Negotiate Up

The biggest mistake creators make is waiting for brands to come to them. Outbound pitching β€” emailing brands directly β€” works at any channel size, even under 10,000 subscribers, if you have a focused niche and strong engagement. Find the brand’s marketing or partnerships contact on LinkedIn and send a concise three-paragraph email: who you are, why your audience matches their customer profile, and what you’re offering.

When a brand sends you a rate that feels too low, don’t just reject it β€” counter with data. Pull your last 30-day analytics: average views, watch time, click-through rate, audience demographics. Brands respond to numbers, not feelings. A counter-pitch that says “my last five videos averaged 42,000 views and 6.2% engagement, and your competitors are paying $X” is far more effective than simply saying “I think I’m worth more.”

Three things you can negotiate beyond the base rate: a kill fee clause (you get 50% if the brand cancels after you’ve started production), a performance bonus if the video hits a view threshold above your average, and first-right-of-refusal for future campaigns in exchange for a slight discount on this one. Most brands will agree to kill fees and performance bonuses without much pushback.

How many subscribers do I need before brands will pay me for sponsorships? β–Ύ
There is no hard subscriber minimum β€” brands care about views and audience fit, not subscriber count. Channels with as few as 3,000–5,000 subscribers regularly land paid deals if their niche is tight and their engagement is strong. Start pitching once you’re consistently getting 1,000+ views per video in a commercially valuable niche.
What is a fair CPV rate for a mid-sized YouTube channel? β–Ύ
For channels between 50,000 and 500,000 subscribers in a mid-tier niche like lifestyle or education, a fair CPV rate is $15–$30 per 1,000 views. Finance and tech channels in the same size range should be targeting $25–$50 CPV. If a brand offers below $10 CPV and you’re not just starting out, it’s reasonable to decline or counter.
Should I use a media kit when pitching sponsors? β–Ύ
Yes β€” a one or two page media kit significantly increases your response rate from brands. Include your channel niche, average views per video, audience demographics (age, gender, top countries), engagement rate, and past brand partners if you have them. Keep it visual and concise; brands receive dozens of pitches and won’t read three pages of text.
Is it better to use a sponsorship marketplace or pitch brands directly? β–Ύ
Marketplaces like Grapevine, Collabor8, and Aspire are useful for finding your first few deals and understanding market rates, but they typically pay 20–40% less than direct outreach because the platform takes a cut. Once you have two or three deals under your belt, move to direct outreach and use marketplaces only to fill gaps between campaigns.
Do I need to disclose sponsorships in my YouTube videos? β–Ύ
Yes β€” disclosure is legally required in most countries under FTC guidelines (US), CAP Code (UK), and equivalent regulations elsewhere. You must verbally disclose the sponsorship at the start of the sponsored segment and check YouTube’s “paid promotion” checkbox in video settings. Failing to disclose can result in FTC fines and YouTube penalties, not just brand backlash.

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