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youtube shortsmonetizationrevenue sharingshorts fundYouTube Shorts Fund vs Revenue Sharing 2026: Which Pays More?
YouTube Shorts revenue sharing pays 45% of ad revenue to creators — a massive upgrade from the old Shorts Fund that paid random amounts. Here's how the current system works, what you actually earn, and how to qualify.
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YouTube Shorts Fund vs Revenue Sharing: Key Differences
The YouTube Shorts Fund (2021-2023) paid creators $100-10,000/month randomly based on performance. The new revenue sharing model (launched Feb 2023) pays creators 45% of ad revenue generated from ads shown between Shorts. Revenue sharing is far more predictable and scales with your views.
How Much Does YouTube Shorts Revenue Sharing Pay in 2026?
YouTube Shorts revenue sharing pays approximately $0.03-0.08 per 1,000 views in the USA after YouTube takes its 55% cut. India earns $0.005-0.02 per 1,000 views due to lower advertiser CPMs. Finance and business niches earn 3-5x more than entertainment.
YouTube Shorts Revenue Sharing Eligibility Requirements
To qualify for YouTube Shorts revenue sharing you need: 500+ subscribers, 3 public uploads in the last 90 days, and either 3,000 watch hours (long-form) OR 3 million Shorts views in the last 90 days. Once in YPP, all your Shorts automatically earn revenue.
YouTube Shorts Fund vs Revenue Sharing: Which Was Better?
Revenue sharing is objectively better for consistent creators. The old Fund was unpredictable — creators with 10 million views sometimes earned less than creators with 1 million views. Revenue sharing rewards consistency and scales linearly with viewership.