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HOW TO MAKE MONEY ONLINE YOUTUBE

Do YouTubers Get Paid More if I Watch the Whole Ad?

Sometimes, yes — but not always.

If you watch the whole ad on YouTube, a creator may earn more in some situations, especially with certain skippable ad formats. But it is not a simple universal rule that “full ad watched = more money every time”.

The more useful answer depends on the ad type, whether the ad impression qualifies for payment, whether the viewer interacts, where the viewer is located, and how that view fits into the creator’s wider RPM and monetisation mix. This guide breaks that down properly.

Why trust this guide?

I am not writing this as an outsider. I am a YouTube Certified Expert. I have coached 500+ clients, built and grown multiple channels, earned six YouTube Silver Play Buttons, built a personal audience of 100k+, and spent years working across YouTube strategy, SEO, retention, metadata, channel systems, and monetisation.

Ad revenue questions get messy because people mix up impressions, CPM, RPM, ad formats, and viewer behaviour. The point of this guide is to untangle that in plain English.

If you want the wider monetisation picture as well, read What Percentage of YouTubers Make Money?. If you want help applying any of this to your own channel, you can book a discovery call.

Quick answer: do YouTubers get paid more if I watch the whole ad?

Sometimes. Watching the whole ad can increase what a creator earns in some cases, especially with skippable video ads, but it does not automatically mean more money every single time.

The answer depends on the ad format, whether the ad impression qualifies for payment, and how YouTube is monetising that specific view.

That is the short answer Google can quote and the reader can use straight away.

The more precise version is this: creators can earn from ad impressions in different ways, and the value of a single ad view is shaped by more than just “did the viewer watch the whole thing?”. Some ads are skippable, some are not, some may pay after a certain watch threshold or interaction, and some revenue is better understood through overall RPM than through one ad event in isolation.

Why it depends on ad type

The first thing to understand is that not all YouTube ads work the same way.

Ad type Does “watch the whole ad” matter? Why
Skippable in-stream ad Often yes These can depend on how long the viewer watches or whether they interact
Non-skippable in-stream ad Not in the same way The ad was already served fully, so completion is built into the format
Bumper ad Not really These are very short and non-skippable by design
Premium watch No ad to watch Premium uses subscription revenue instead of normal ad serving

YouTube’s ad format documentation confirms that creators can have skippable, non-skippable, bumper, pre-roll, post-roll, and mid-roll formats depending on the video and monetisation settings. Source: YouTube Help.

Skippable ads explained

This is where most of the confusion comes from.

For skippable ads, the advertiser may not pay in the same way if the viewer skips very early. A longer watch or an interaction can matter more than a near-instant skip. This is why people often say that watching the whole ad helps the creator more.

Plain English version:

  • If you skip quickly, the creator may earn less or nothing from that ad impression.
  • If you watch longer, the creator is more likely to benefit.
  • If you watch the whole ad, that can sometimes be even better, but it still depends on the ad and bidding model.

This is the part that makes the original question directionally right, but still too simplistic. Watching the whole ad can help, but it is not a guaranteed flat-rate bonus that applies the same way to every ad.

Non-skippable ads explained

Non-skippable ads work differently because the viewer cannot skip them in the first place. That means the creator is not relying on the viewer choosing to stay past a skip threshold in the same way.

In that case, the question is less about “did you watch the whole ad?” and more about the fact that the ad was served at all.

Simple rule: completion matters more for skippable ads than for non-skippable ads.

Does clicking the ad help creators earn more?

Sometimes, yes.

Some ad models can be influenced by interaction as well as watch behaviour. So if a viewer clicks, that can signal more value to the advertiser and can contribute to the economics of that ad impression.

That said, creators should not be telling viewers to click ads just to help them. It is not a sensible growth strategy, and it is not how serious channels build reliable income anyway.

Why watching the whole ad is not the whole story

This is where creator earnings become more realistic and less myth-based.

Even if a viewer watches the whole ad, that is still only one tiny event inside a much bigger system. A creator’s earnings are shaped by:

  • how many views they get
  • how many of those views are monetised
  • how many ad impressions are served
  • which countries the viewers are in
  • which niche the content is in
  • whether the audience is advertiser-friendly
  • whether the channel also earns from Premium, memberships, affiliates, or sponsors

YouTube’s revenue analytics documentation explains that a view does not always include an ad, and that monetised playbacks and ad impressions are different from total views. It also explains that RPM includes more than just ads, such as YouTube Premium and fan funding. Source: YouTube Help.

Question Best answer
Does watching the whole ad always mean more money? No
Can watching more of a skippable ad help? Yes
Do non-skippable ads work the same way? No
Is ad completion the main thing creators should optimise for? No, the bigger picture matters more

How this affects CPM and RPM

If you want to understand why two channels with similar views can earn very different amounts, you need to understand CPM and RPM.

Simple definitions:

  • CPM is what advertisers pay per 1,000 ad impressions before YouTube’s revenue share.
  • RPM is what the creator earns per 1,000 views after YouTube’s share and can include ads, Premium, memberships, and other revenue.

This matters because a single viewer watching a full ad might help at the margin, but the creator’s real business outcome is measured across the whole revenue system. YouTube’s own RPM help page confirms that RPM includes ad revenue, YouTube Premium, channel memberships, and more. YouTube Help.

If you want the deep dive, also read What Is YouTube CPM? and What Is YouTube RPM?.

Fresh official facts worth knowing

This topic becomes much stronger when you anchor it in current YouTube documentation rather than old creator folklore.

Fact Why it matters Source
YouTube distinguishes between views, estimated monetized playbacks, and ad impressions Shows that earnings are more complex than “one view equals one ad payment” YouTube Help
Not all views have ads Explains why total views and earnings do not map neatly YouTube Help
YouTube supports multiple ad formats including skippable and non-skippable ads Important because completion behaviour matters differently by format YouTube Help
RPM includes more than just ad revenue Shows why “watching the whole ad” is only one small part of creator income YouTube Help

What creators should actually focus on

If you are a creator, the right takeaway is not to obsess over whether one viewer watched one ad to the end. The better move is to build a channel that earns well across multiple layers.

What actually moves the needle more: stronger topics, better thumbnails, better retention, more monetised playbacks, better audience fit, cleaner ad-friendly content, and a broader revenue mix.

That means improving:

  • topic selection
  • title and thumbnail packaging
  • audience retention
  • mid-roll placement strategy on longer videos
  • overall RPM rather than one ad event

If you want to think more broadly about monetisation behaviour, also read Do YouTubers Get Paid If You Have YouTube Premium?, Do YouTubers Get Paid If I Use AdBlock?, and Do YouTubers Still Get Paid for Old Videos?.

Video pick: RPM vs CPM on YouTube

This is relevant because the whole-ad question makes more sense once you understand the difference between ad value and overall creator earnings.

Tools that genuinely help you build a better monetised channel

The old tools section needed a full rebuild. Tools should support a strategy, not pretend to replace one. These are the ones I would actually recommend first because they are relevant, trustworthy, and already supported by useful content on this site.

Tool Best for Why it earns a place here Best next step
YouTube Studio Watching RPM, monetized playbacks, and retention This is where you see the bigger picture rather than obsessing over one ad event Learn how to read the right signals
vidIQ Topic research and search-led growth Useful because better topics and stronger click-through usually matter more than one ad completion event Try vidIQ or read my vidIQ review
TubeBuddy Publishing workflow and metadata support Helpful when your bottleneck is process and optimisation consistency Try TubeBuddy or read my TubeBuddy review
StreamYard Live streams, interviews, webinars Useful if your monetisation mix includes live formats and fan-funding options as well as ads Try StreamYard or read my StreamYard review
Syllaby Content planning and consistency Useful when your real challenge is building enough good content to increase monetised view opportunities Try Syllaby or read my Syllaby review

Which tool should you pick first?

  • Start with YouTube Studio if you want the cleanest view of RPM, monetized playbacks, and audience behaviour.
  • Use vidIQ or TubeBuddy if your bigger issue is getting people to click and watch in the first place.
  • Use StreamYard if live content is part of your income mix.
  • Use Syllaby if consistency is your problem, not analytics.

What I would do if I wanted better ad earnings

  1. Stop obsessing over one viewer’s ad completion.
  2. Focus on stronger content that holds attention longer.
  3. Increase monetised playbacks and total watch time.
  4. Understand RPM instead of only thinking about ad clicks.
  5. Build more than one revenue stream.

Final thoughts

If you came here for the fast answer, here it is again: sometimes, yes — watching the whole ad can help a creator earn more, but not always.

That is especially true for skippable ads, where watch length and interaction can matter more than they do with non-skippable formats.

The bigger truth is that creators make money from a wider system, not from one simple rule. Ad type, monetized playbacks, CPM, RPM, audience fit, retention, and other revenue streams all matter.

If you want help building the kind of channel where those pieces work together, start with Who Is Alan Spicer?, read how I help creators and brands grow, or book a discovery call.

Frequently asked questions

Do YouTubers get paid more if I watch the whole ad?

Sometimes. Watching the whole ad can increase what a creator earns in some cases, especially with skippable ads, but it is not a universal rule that applies the same way every time.

Do skippable ads pay more if I do not skip?

They can. A longer watch or an interaction can make that ad impression more valuable than an instant skip.

Do non-skippable ads work the same way?

Not exactly. With non-skippable ads, the ad has already been served fully, so viewer completion works differently from skippable formats.

Does clicking the ad help the YouTuber?

Sometimes, yes, but creators should not build their strategy around encouraging ad clicks. The bigger revenue picture matters more.

Does every YouTube view include an ad?

No. YouTube’s own analytics documentation says not all views have ads, which is one reason total views and earnings do not match neatly.

Is watching the whole ad the best way to support a creator?

It can help, but better support usually comes from watching more of the video, engaging, subscribing, using affiliate links, joining memberships, or buying creator products and services.

Does YouTube Premium change this?

Yes. Premium members do not watch normal ads, but creators can still earn through Premium revenue sharing instead.

What should creators focus on instead of obsessing over ad completion?

Creators should focus on stronger topics, better thumbnails, better retention, more monetized playbacks, and a wider monetisation mix.