YouTube monetisation in the UK in 2026 requires meeting one of two threshold combinations — and the pathway you choose affects both how quickly you qualify and what features you unlock first. This guide explains both routes clearly, what the earnings actually look like, and how to prepare before you apply.
For the broader question of timelines: How long does it take to monetise a YouTube channel? covers the realistic range across different niches and publishing schedules.
The Two YouTube Partner Programme Pathways in 2026
| Pathway | Requirements | What You Unlock | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard YPP (Full Monetisation) | 1,000 subscribers + 4,000 public watch hours in the last 12 months (or 10M Shorts views in 90 days) | AdSense, channel memberships, Super Thanks, Super Chat, merch shelf | Creators with established long-form content |
| Expanded Partner Programme (Basic) | 500 subscribers + 3 public uploads in 90 days + 3,000 watch hours in 12 months | Channel memberships and Super Thanks only — no AdSense | Creators with smaller but engaged audiences who want early monetisation options |
📊 What Happens to Shorts Watch Hours
YouTube Shorts watch time does NOT count toward the 4,000 watch hours threshold for Standard YPP. Shorts views count separately via the 10M Shorts views in 90 days route. If you’re publishing both Shorts and long-form, only your long-form watch hours count toward the standard threshold.
How to Apply for the YouTube Partner Programme (UK)
- Open YouTube Studio → Earn (left sidebar)
- Click ‘Apply now’ — only visible once you meet the thresholds
- Accept the YouTube Partner Programme terms
- Connect your Google AdSense account (or create one — must have a UK bank account and valid address)
- Wait for YouTube’s review — typically 2–4 weeks. YouTube manually reviews your channel for policy compliance.
- Receive approval or rejection notification by email. If rejected, you can re-apply after 30 days.
What Earnings Actually Look Like for UK Channels
UK YouTube earnings depend heavily on your niche, audience age, and where your viewers are based. CPM (cost per thousand impressions) varies enormously:
| Niche | Typical UK CPM Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Finance / investing | £8–£25+ | Highest CPM niches — premium advertisers |
| Business / B2B / consulting | £6–£18 | Strong advertiser interest |
| YouTube education / creator tools | £4–£12 | Growing niche, strong advertiser base |
| Technology / software | £4–£15 | Varies significantly by sub-niche |
| Lifestyle / vlogging | £2–£6 | Broad audience, lower advertiser specificity |
| Gaming | £1.50–£5 | High volume, lower CPM |
| Entertainment / general | £1–£4 | Very broad, advertiser selectivity low |
For UK creators, RPM (revenue per thousand views — what you actually receive after YouTube’s 45% cut) typically runs 40–60% of CPM. See how much 1 million YouTube views makes for realistic income breakdowns.
What to Do While You’re Waiting to Qualify
AdSense is not the only way to monetise a YouTube channel — and for most creators in the early stages, it is not the most important. Ways to earn from a YouTube channel before hitting 1,000 subscribers:
- Affiliate marketing: No subscriber minimum required. Amazon Associates and tool affiliates like vidIQ and TubeBuddy pay commissions regardless of subscriber count.
- Direct client acquisition: For service businesses and consultants, even a small YouTube channel generates discovery call bookings. See YouTube Consulting UK for how this works.
- Digital products: Courses, templates, guides — no subscriber minimum. Audience quality matters more than quantity for digital product sales.
- Brand partnerships: Micro-influencer deals (1,000–10,000 subscribers) are increasingly common for niche audiences with genuine engagement.
WORK WITH ALAN SPICER
Want a monetisation strategy that doesn’t depend on waiting for AdSense?
YouTube Certified Expert · 500+ channels audited · UK-based consultant
RELATED READING
Sources: YouTube Help: YouTube Partner Programme overview · YouTube Help: monetisation eligibility · YouTube Creator Academy: monetisation basics · HMRC guidance: self-assessment for creators (gov.uk)
