Analytics
By Vladislav P·13 Jul 2026·8 min read

How Much Do Minecraft YouTubers Really Make? (2026 Data)

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Minecraft gaming channels typically earn between $1 and $3 per 1,000 views in ad revenue alone — but the most profitable ones make ten times that figure once sponsorships, memberships, and merchandise enter the picture. After reviewing thousands of gaming channel deals on Hypertube, the gap between what people assume Minecraft YouTubers earn and what they actually pocket is striking.

TLDR — A Minecraft YouTuber with 100K subscribers typically earns $200–$800 per month from ads, but top creators multiply that with brand deals, memberships, and merchandise. Gaming is a low-CPM niche, so Minecraft YouTube earnings depend heavily on diversification beyond AdSense. If you want to understand the real value of a Minecraft channel, monetization and monthly profit matter far more than subscriber count.

What Do Minecraft YouTubers Actually Earn from Ads?

Minecraft YouTube ad revenue typically ranges from $1 to $3 RPM (revenue per 1,000 views) for average-sized channels, with top performers reaching $5–$8 RPM during Q4 when advertiser spending peaks. A channel pulling 500,000 monthly views at a $2 RPM earns roughly $1,000 per month from ads alone — before any other income stream.

Gaming is one of the lowest-CPM niches on YouTube. In the channel-pricing data we analyse at Hypertube, gaming channels consistently show a median RPM near $1.00 — reflecting heavy exposure to non-Western audiences from South and Southeast Asia, where advertisers bid far less per impression. Minecraft has a particularly young, global audience, which keeps CPM rates compressed compared to niches like finance or tech.

According to YouTube's own data shared via the YouTube Partner Program explained guide, creators keep 55% of ad revenue on long-form content. So even with healthy view counts, a Minecraft YouTuber's AdSense check is rarely their biggest income source.

How much does a Minecraft channel need to make before it becomes worth buying or selling? In the deals I've handled on Hypertube, the informal market rule holds: a channel netting $1,000 per month lists at roughly $18,000. A Minecraft channel earning $200/month from ads is worth far less than one earning the same amount but with a sponsorship pipeline, because proven diversified income commands a higher valuation multiple.

How Much Do Big Minecraft Channels Make? (Dream, MrBeast-Level Creators)

Large Minecraft channels — those above 1 million subscribers — earn significantly more per video but actually less per subscriber in ad revenue. Our pricing data shows the per-subscriber rate drops from roughly $6 per 1,000 subs for small channels down to about $1 per 1,000 at the million-subscriber mark, a 6x decline. Channels at the scale of Dream or Technoblade are businesses, not just content operations.

At 10M+ subscribers, a Minecraft channel might generate $50,000–$150,000 per month in combined ad revenue, brand sponsorships, merchandise, and membership fees — though the spread is enormous depending on upload frequency, audience demographics, and brand deal volume. What's rarely discussed is that brand deals for top Minecraft creators typically pay $20,000–$100,000+ per integration, dwarfing AdSense entirely.

The monetization reality at scale is something I see confirmed in our marketplace data. A 13.6M-subscriber channel was listed on Hypertube at just $8,999 because it lacked monetization — less than many Minecraft channels with 50,000 subscribers that were actively earning. Audience size means nothing without revenue. If a channel isn't monetized, all those views translate to near-zero resale value.

You can estimate what a Minecraft channel at any scale might be worth using the Revenue Calculator — it factors in subscriber count, monetization status, and niche to produce realistic earning estimates.

Beyond AdSense: How Minecraft Creators Really Build Income

Diversified Minecraft YouTubers earn from five main streams beyond ads: brand sponsorships, Channel Memberships, merchandise, Super Chats during livestreams, and affiliate links. For mid-size creators (100K–500K subscribers), sponsorships and memberships routinely double or triple the AdSense income — which is why monthly profit correlates 0.87 with asking price in our channel data, while subscriber count alone correlates only 0.3–0.4.

  • Brand sponsorships: Gaming peripheral brands (keyboards, chairs, headsets), VPN services, and game publishers pay $500–$50,000 per integration depending on channel size
  • Channel Memberships: Available to channels with 1,000+ subscribers — active Minecraft communities often convert 0.5–2% of subscribers into paying members at $4.99/month
  • Merchandise: Print-on-demand and custom apparel can add $500–$20,000/month for channels with engaged fanbases
  • Super Chats and Super Thanks: Direct fan funding during livestreams and on published videos — particularly strong for Minecraft creators who do regular survival or hardcore streams
  • YouTube Shopping: Now open to creators with 500+ subscribers, enabling product tagging across Shorts, long-form, and livestreams — a growing Minecraft monetization channel

YouTube's Made on YouTube 2025 event confirmed that Shopping GMV grew 5x year-over-year — and gaming creators are increasingly tagging merchandise and gaming gear directly in their videos, turning views into direct sales.

What Is a Minecraft YouTube Channel Actually Worth?

A monetized Minecraft channel sells for roughly 3x the price of a comparable non-monetized one. In the premium segment (above $5,000), channels are valued at a median of about 1.5x annual net profit — meaning a Minecraft channel netting $500/month is worth approximately $9,000 on the open market. The valuation multiple rises with channel age: channels older than 7 years command about 1.9x annual profit versus 1.3x for newer ones.

In the 10,000+ channel deals I've handled, gaming channels consistently rank as one of the most liquid categories — they sell faster than average, with median listing times around 12 days in the budget tier. But they're also the cheapest per subscriber, with gaming channels fetching roughly $14–15 per 1,000 subscribers at the low end. If you're buying a Minecraft channel expecting passive income, you need to pay close attention to the CPM and revenue disclosures — roughly 57% of gaming channel listings disclose no earnings at all.

Use the Fair Price Analyser to benchmark any Minecraft channel against real market data before making an offer. It accounts for monetization status, niche, subscriber count, and revenue — the four factors that actually move the needle on price.

Minecraft Channel Earnings: A Realistic Breakdown by Size

To make this concrete: a Minecraft channel with 50,000 subscribers earning $150/month from ads and no other revenue stream has a market value of roughly $2,000–$4,000. Add a brand deal pipeline generating another $300/month and that same channel's valuation jumps to $8,000–$10,000. The income stream — not the audience — is what buyers pay for.

Channel SizeMonthly Ad Revenue (est.)With SponsorshipsMarket Value (monetized)
10K–50K subs50–200 USD/month200–800 USD/month2,000–8,000 USD
50K–200K subs200–800 USD/month800–3,000 USD/month8,000–30,000 USD
200K–1M subs800–4,000 USD/month3,000–20,000 USD/month30,000–200,000 USD
1M+ subs4,000–20,000 USD/month20,000–150,000 USD/month200,000–1,500,000 USD

If you're looking to acquire an established Minecraft channel rather than build from scratch, browse monetized YouTube channels for sale on Hypertube — every listing includes monetization status and available earnings data so you can assess real return on investment.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a Minecraft YouTuber with 1,000 subscribers make?

A Minecraft YouTuber with 1,000 subscribers earns very little from ads alone — typically $0–$30 per month depending on view count and upload frequency. At 1,000 subscribers, a channel just meets the YouTube Partner Program threshold (requiring also 4,000 watch hours). The channel's monetization potential grows with viewership, not subscriber count.

How much does a Minecraft YouTube channel with 100K subscribers make per month?

A Minecraft channel with 100,000 subscribers earns roughly $200–$800 per month from ad revenue, assuming active uploads and decent view-through rates. With a single mid-tier brand sponsorship, that figure often doubles. Channels that disclose real revenue at this size are priced about 8x higher per subscriber than those that stay silent on earnings — making transparency a direct financial asset.

What is the CPM for Minecraft YouTube channels?

Minecraft channels generally see CPM rates of $2–$6, with RPM (what the creator actually receives) landing between $1 and $3. CPM peaks in Q4 (October–December) when ad budgets spike. English-language Minecraft channels targeting US, UK, or Australian audiences command significantly higher CPM than channels with South Asian or Southeast Asian audiences.

Is it worth buying a Minecraft YouTube channel?

Buying a Minecraft YouTube channel can be worth it if you focus on monetized channels with verified earnings. Gaming channels, including Minecraft, are among the most liquid on the market — they sell quickly and at lower per-subscriber prices than premium niches. The risk is that gaming audiences are often tied to a specific creator's persona, so retention after a channel transfer depends heavily on content continuity. Always verify revenue figures and watch time history before purchasing through a secure escrow system.

How much does a Minecraft YouTuber make per 1 million views?

At an average RPM of $1.50–$2.50 for gaming content, 1 million views on a Minecraft channel generates approximately $1,500–$2,500 in ad revenue. However, a single sponsored video integrated into that same content could earn an additional $5,000–$30,000 depending on the deal and channel size. For Minecraft YouTubers, views are the foundation — but sponsorships are where the real money lives.

V
Vladislav P

Founder, Hypertube. 8+ years in Youtube industry. 10k+ conducted deals with Youtube channels.