Usually, no — if AdBlock prevents ads from being shown, the creator generally does not earn normal ad revenue from that blocked ad playback.
That is the short answer. The more useful answer is understanding what kind of revenue gets blocked, what still counts, when creators can still earn in other ways, and why AdBlock is only one part of the bigger YouTube monetisation picture.
This guide breaks that down properly, including ads, Premium, memberships, affiliate links, watch time, and what AdBlock really means for creators trying to build sustainable income.
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.
This matters because questions like this are often answered too simply. Creators and viewers both benefit from knowing what AdBlock actually changes, what it does not change, and where the real money is made.
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.
Jump to what you need
Quick answer: do YouTubers get paid if I use AdBlock?
Usually not for the blocked ad view itself. If AdBlock stops the ad from being shown, the creator generally does not earn standard ad revenue from that blocked playback.
But that does not always mean the creator gets nothing at all from you as a viewer, because other revenue sources can still exist.
That is the fast answer and it is still the right one for the main query.
The fuller answer is that YouTube ad revenue depends on monetized playbacks and ad impressions, not just total views. YouTube’s own ad revenue analytics documentation says not all views will have ads, and that views that include ads are referred to as monetized playbacks. If AdBlock prevents the ad from loading, that blocked ad impression is generally not creating normal ad revenue in the way a served ad might. Source: YouTube Help.
What AdBlock actually stops
AdBlock usually stops the normal watch-page ad experience or interferes with it. That means the advertiser may not get the ad impression it expected and the creator may not get the ad revenue that would have come from that playback.
| If AdBlock blocks… | What usually happens | What it means for the creator |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-roll or in-stream ad | The ad may never fully load or serve | Usually no standard ad revenue for that blocked ad event |
| Display or overlay ad | The ad may not appear | That monetisation opportunity may be lost |
| Non-ad revenue streams | These are separate | The creator may still earn through other routes |
This is why the cleanest answer is “usually no for the blocked ad itself”, not “the creator gets nothing from you at all under any circumstances”.
Do creators still get anything if I use AdBlock?
Sometimes, yes — but not from the blocked ad.
Even if AdBlock stops ad revenue on that playback, creators can still earn from other monetisation routes connected to that viewer, such as:
- YouTube Premium revenue if the viewer is also a Premium member
- channel memberships
- Super Thanks, Super Chat, or Super Stickers
- affiliate links
- sponsorship-driven conversions
- products, services, or coaching
Plain English version: AdBlock usually removes the ad revenue part of that view, but it does not magically erase every other way a creator can make money.
AdBlock vs YouTube Premium
This is an important distinction.
If you use AdBlock, you are usually blocking the ad experience without creating a replacement subscription revenue stream for the creator.
If you use YouTube Premium, you also do not watch ads, but YouTube says it shares part of your monthly membership fee with creators based on how much Premium members watch their content. How YouTube Premium supports creators and Your content & YouTube Premium.
| Viewer setup | Ads shown? | Can the creator still earn directly from the platform? |
|---|---|---|
| Standard viewer with no blocker | Usually yes | Yes, through ads if monetized playbacks occur |
| Viewer using AdBlock | Usually no | Usually not from that blocked ad playback |
| YouTube Premium member | No | Yes, through Premium revenue sharing |
This is why AdBlock and Premium are not the same thing from a creator earnings point of view. If you want the full breakdown, read Do YouTubers Get Paid If You Have YouTube Premium?.
What still counts even with AdBlock?
Even if the creator does not earn normal ad revenue from that blocked playback, the view can still matter in other ways.
- watch time can still matter
- retention signals can still matter
- engagement can still matter
- the view can still influence recommendations and channel growth
That matters because creator businesses are not built only on one ad impression. A viewer who uses AdBlock but watches regularly, engages, joins a membership, buys a product, or clicks an affiliate link may still be financially valuable to the creator in the bigger picture.
Why this is not the whole monetisation story
The phrase “YouTubers do not get paid if I use AdBlock” is directionally right for ad revenue, but too small as a complete business answer.
YouTube itself explains that not all views include ads, that monetized playbacks are different from total views, and that RPM includes more than just ad revenue. RPM can include YouTube Premium, memberships, Super Thanks and other revenue sources depending on the channel’s monetisation mix. YouTube Help.
| Question | Best answer |
|---|---|
| Does AdBlock usually reduce ad revenue for creators? | Yes |
| Does AdBlock mean the creator gets nothing from you at all? | No |
| Is YouTube Premium different from AdBlock? | Yes |
| Should creators rely only on ads anyway? | No |
Fresh official facts worth knowing
This topic becomes much stronger when it is anchored to official YouTube documentation rather than creator folklore.
| Fact | Why it matters | Source |
|---|---|---|
| YouTube says not all views have ads, and views that include ads are called monetized playbacks | Explains why ad-blocked views do not behave like ad-served views | YouTube Help |
| YouTube says creators can earn part of a Premium member’s fee when that member watches their content | Shows why Premium is different from AdBlock | YouTube Help |
| YouTube says Premium supports creators by sharing monthly membership fees with them | Confirms the replacement revenue model for ad-free Premium viewing | YouTube Help |
| YouTube’s ways-to-earn documentation shows creators can monetise through multiple features, not just advertising | Reinforces the idea that ads are only one layer of creator income | YouTube Help |
What creators should actually focus on
If you are a creator, the correct response to AdBlock is not panic. It is diversification.
What matters more than obsessing over AdBlock: stronger topics, better thumbnails, better retention, Premium revenue, memberships, affiliate links, sponsorships, and products or services that fit your audience.
That is the real creator mindset. Ads matter, but they are not the only income stream serious channels should build around.
If you want to widen the picture, also read Do YouTubers Get Paid More If I Watch the Whole Ad?, Do YouTubers Still Get Paid for Old Videos?, and The Top Ways to Monetise Your YouTube Channel.
Tools that genuinely help you build a more resilient monetisation strategy
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 revenue mix | This is where you see the real revenue picture rather than assuming every view behaves the same | Learn how to read the right signals |
| vidIQ | Topic research and search-led growth | Useful because stronger content performance matters more than trying to fix one monetisation leak in isolation | Try vidIQ or read my vidIQ review |
| TubeBuddy | Publishing workflow and optimisation support | Helpful if your issue is consistency and packaging rather than raw idea generation | Try TubeBuddy or read my TubeBuddy review |
| StreamYard | Live monetisation and audience connection | Useful because live content can diversify income through memberships, Super Chat, and stronger direct audience support | Try StreamYard or read my StreamYard review |
| Syllaby | Content planning and consistency | Useful when your bigger problem is publishing enough good content to build multiple revenue paths | Try Syllaby or read my Syllaby review |
Which tool should you pick first?
- Start with YouTube Studio if you want to understand how much of your revenue actually comes from ads vs other sources.
- Use vidIQ or TubeBuddy if your bigger problem is getting views and retention in the first place.
- Use StreamYard if live content and direct audience support fit your channel.
- Use Syllaby if consistency is the real bottleneck.
Related reading on YouTube money, ads, and monetisation
What I would do if I wanted to support creators without watching ads
- Use YouTube Premium instead of AdBlock if you want an ad-free experience that still supports creators.
- Join memberships for channels you watch often.
- Use affiliate links if the creator recommends something genuinely useful.
- Buy products, courses, or services from creators you trust.
- Watch, engage, and share content that deserves more reach.
Final thoughts
If you came here for the fast answer, here it is again: usually, no — if AdBlock prevents the ad from being shown, the creator generally does not earn standard ad revenue from that blocked ad playback.
But that does not mean the creator gets n
othing from you as a viewer. Premium, memberships, affiliates, products, and long-term viewer value can still matter.
The bigger lesson for creators is not to rely on ads alone. The bigger lesson for viewers is that AdBlock and YouTube Premium are not the same thing from a creator-support point of view.
If you want help building a channel that earns in more than one way, 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 if I use AdBlock?
Usually not for the blocked ad playback itself. If AdBlock prevents the ad from being served, the creator generally does not earn standard ad revenue from that ad event.
Does AdBlock stop all creator income?
No. It usually blocks ad revenue for that playback, but creators may still earn through Premium, memberships, affiliate links, products, services, or other support.
Is YouTube Premium better for creators than AdBlock?
Yes. YouTube says Premium shares part of the membership fee with creators based on how much Premium members watch their content.
Do blocked views still count as views?
Yes, the view and watch behaviour can still matter, but that does not mean a normal ad impression was monetized.
Does AdBlock hurt YouTubers?
It can reduce ad revenue, especially for creators who rely heavily on watch-page monetisation. The impact varies depending on how diversified the creator’s business is.
Do all YouTube views have ads anyway?
No. YouTube itself says not all views have ads, and it tracks monetized playbacks separately from total views.
What is the best way to support creators without watching ads?
Use YouTube Premium, join memberships, use affiliate links, buy creator products, or support creators directly in other ways.
What should creators do about AdBlock?
They should diversify income, build stronger audience relationships, and avoid relying only on watch-page ads.

