YouTube Sponsorship Rate Card: How to Price Your Brand Deals the Right Way
Here is a truth that makes me genuinely frustrated: most YouTube creators are massively undercharging for sponsorships. In my consulting work, I see it constantly — creators accepting £200 for a video that reaches 50,000 people, when the brand would happily have paid ten times that amount. The problem is not that brands are cheap. The problem is that creators have no idea what they are worth.
After 20+ years as a content creator, six Silver Play Buttons, and hundreds of consulting sessions where sponsorship pricing is one of the most common topics, I can tell you that having a professional YouTube sponsorship rate card is the single most important step you can take to stop leaving money on the table. A rate card is not just a document — it is your confidence anchor, your negotiation weapon, and your professional calling card all in one.
If you have already landed your first deal (or you are working towards it — check out my guide on how to get YouTube sponsorships with under 10,000 subscribers), this guide will show you exactly how to price your brand deals, what to include in your rate card, and how to negotiate so you never undersell yourself again.
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What Is a YouTube Sponsorship Rate Card?
A YouTube sponsorship rate card is a professional document that outlines your channel’s statistics, audience demographics, available sponsorship formats, and pricing for each type of brand collaboration. Think of it as a menu that brands and agencies can review when deciding whether to work with you and how much budget to allocate.
When I was on the vidIQ Creator Success team, I saw firsthand how brands evaluate potential sponsorship partners. The creators who arrived with polished rate cards and clear pricing were treated as professionals from the first email. The creators who replied with “what’s your budget?” were treated as amateurs — and paid accordingly.
A strong rate card accomplishes three things:
- Establishes your professionalism — brands deal with hundreds of creators, and a rate card signals you understand the business side
- Anchors the negotiation — when you state your price first, the conversation starts from your number, not their lowball offer
- Saves time — brands that cannot afford your rates self-select out, meaning you only spend time on deals that are worth pursuing
YouTube Sponsorship Pricing Models Explained
Before you can set your rates, you need to understand the different pricing models that brands and creators use. Each has advantages and drawbacks, and the right choice depends on your channel’s size, consistency, and risk tolerance.
1. CPV (Cost Per View) Pricing
CPV pricing charges the brand a set amount for every view your sponsored video receives. Typical CPV rates range from £0.02-0.10 depending on your niche and audience quality. For example, at £0.05 CPV, a video that gets 100,000 views would earn you £5,000.
Best for: Creators with consistently high view counts who want upside potential. Risk: If a video underperforms, your earnings drop significantly.
2. CPM-Based Pricing
CPM (cost per mille/thousand views) pricing works similarly to AdSense but at much higher rates. While your YouTube AdSense CPM might be £5-15, sponsorship CPMs typically range from £15-80 depending on niche. You calculate your rate by multiplying your average views by the CPM and dividing by 1,000.
Best for: Mid-sized creators who want a data-driven approach to pricing. Risk: Requires accurate view count predictions.
3. Flat Rate Pricing
Flat rate pricing is the simplest model — you charge a fixed fee per video regardless of performance. This is what I recommend for most creators because it guarantees your income and removes the stress of worrying about view counts after the video goes live.
Best for: Creators at any level who want predictable income. Risk: You might leave money on the table if a video massively overperforms.
4. Performance-Based Pricing
Performance-based pricing ties your compensation to specific outcomes — clicks, sign-ups, purchases, or app downloads. This is essentially an affiliate model wrapped in a sponsorship deal. Brands love it because they only pay for results, but it shifts all the risk onto you.
Best for: Creators with highly engaged audiences and proven conversion track records. Risk: You bear all the performance risk, and factors outside your control (landing page quality, product pricing) affect your earnings.
5. Hybrid Pricing
Hybrid pricing combines a guaranteed base fee with a performance bonus. For example, you might charge £2,000 flat plus £0.03 CPV for views exceeding your average, or £1,500 base plus a commission on sales generated through your tracking link. This is my preferred model for experienced creators because it provides a safety net with upside potential.
Best for: Established creators negotiating with bigger brands. Risk: More complex to negotiate and track.
Key Takeaway: If you are just starting with sponsorships, use flat rate pricing. As you build a track record and have data to prove your conversion ability, transition to hybrid pricing for higher earnings. Avoid pure performance-based deals unless the brand also provides a guaranteed base.
YouTube Sponsorship Rate Card: Pricing by Channel Size
One of the most common questions I get in my consulting sessions is “how much should I actually charge?” The answer depends on several factors, but here is a comprehensive breakdown by channel size that you can use as a starting point.
| Channel Size | Integrated Mention | Dedicated Video | Sponsorship CPM |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1K-10K Subs | £50-200 | £100-300 | £15-30 |
| 10K-50K Subs | £300-1,000 | £500-1,500 | £20-40 |
| 50K-100K Subs | £1,000-3,000 | £1,500-5,000 | £25-50 |
| 100K-500K Subs | £3,000-10,000 | £5,000-15,000 | £30-60 |
| 500K+ Subs | £10,000-30,000+ | £15,000-50,000+ | £40-80+ |
Important note: These are baseline ranges. Your actual rate should be adjusted based on your niche, engagement rate, audience demographics, and production quality. A finance channel with 30,000 subscribers might command higher rates than a gaming channel with 200,000 subscribers because of the audience’s purchasing power.
Quick Rate Calculation Formula
Here is a simple formula I give to my consulting clients as a starting point:
Base Rate = Average Views Per Video x Your Sponsorship CPM / 1,000
Example: 40,000 average views x £30 CPM / 1,000 = £1,200 per integrated sponsorship
Then apply multipliers based on your niche and sponsorship type (we will cover these in the next sections). To get your average views accurately, use a tool like vidIQ to track your analytics across your last 30 videos — your most recent 10 might skew the average if you had a viral hit or a dud.
Factors That Increase (or Decrease) Your Sponsorship Rate
Subscriber count is only one piece of the puzzle. Smart brands look at the full picture, and so should you when setting your rates. Here are the factors that can dramatically shift what you should be charging.
Niche Premium Multipliers
Not all audiences are created equal in the eyes of advertisers. The amount a brand will pay is directly tied to the purchasing power and intent of your viewers. Here is how different niches compare:
| Niche | Rate Multiplier | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Finance / Investing | 2-3x | High customer lifetime value for financial products |
| Technology / SaaS | 1.5-2.5x | Tech audiences have higher disposable income |
| Business / Entrepreneurship | 1.5-2x | Audience actively seeking tools and services to buy |
| Health / Fitness | 1.2-1.8x | Strong supplement and product purchase intent |
| Beauty / Lifestyle | 1-1.5x | Large market but competitive creator landscape |
| Gaming / Entertainment | 0.8-1.2x | Younger demographic with less purchasing power |
| Vlogs / General | 0.7-1x | Broad audience, less targeted for specific brands |
Engagement Rate
Your engagement rate — the percentage of viewers who like, comment, and share — is increasingly more important than raw subscriber count. A channel with a 6%+ engagement rate can justify charging 30-50% more than the baseline, while a channel with less than 2% engagement may need to adjust downward. When I review channels in my analytics deep dives, engagement rate is one of the first metrics I check because it directly correlates with sponsorship performance.
Audience Demographics
Brands pay more for specific audience profiles. If your viewers are predominantly:
- Age 25-45 — command a premium (peak spending years)
- Located in the UK, US, Canada, Australia — higher CPM regions mean brands will pay more
- Decision-makers or professionals — particularly valuable for B2B sponsors
- Homeowners or parents — highly valuable demographics for consumer brands
Production Quality
Higher production value means the sponsor’s product looks better in your content. If you shoot in 4K with professional lighting, use motion graphics, and deliver polished edits, you can charge 20-40% more than creators with basic talking-head setups. The brand is essentially buying advertising content — the better it looks, the more it is worth to them.
Track Record and Social Proof
If you have case studies showing that previous sponsorships drove measurable results — click-throughs, sign-ups, sales — you can command significantly higher rates. Every successful sponsorship becomes ammunition for your next negotiation. This is why I always recommend creators track their sponsorship performance metrics obsessively. I go deeper into this in my guide on YouTube brand deal negotiation.
YouTube Sponsorship Types and How to Price Each One
Not all sponsorships are created equal, and your rate card should reflect that. Different formats require different levels of effort, deliver different levels of exposure, and should therefore be priced differently. Here is how to approach each type.
Dedicated Video (Full Sponsorship)
The entire video centres on the sponsor’s product or service. You might review it, demonstrate it, or create a tutorial around it. This is the most valuable sponsorship format because the brand gets 100% of the attention.
Pricing: 2-3x your integrated mention rate. If your standard integrated rate is £1,000, a dedicated video should be £2,000-3,000.
Integrated Mention (Mid-Roll Sponsorship)
A 30-90 second segment within your regular content where you naturally weave in the sponsor’s product. This is the most common sponsorship format and what most brands will request initially. The sponsor benefits from appearing within content your audience is already engaged with.
Pricing: This is your baseline rate — the number all other formats are calculated from.
Pre-Roll Sponsorship
A 15-30 second mention at the very beginning of your video, before the main content starts. Similar to a “this video is brought to you by…” format. While it gets maximum visibility (everyone sees the beginning), it also has the highest skip rate.
Pricing: 60-80% of your integrated mention rate. Lower because the segment is shorter and viewers often skip past it.
Product Placement
The sponsor’s product appears visually in your video without a dedicated verbal mention — it might be on your desk, on screen, or used naturally during your content. This is subtle and less common on YouTube but growing in popularity.
Pricing: 30-50% of your integrated mention rate. Less effort and less exposure for the brand.
Affiliate Hybrid
A combination of a paid sponsorship and an affiliate arrangement. You receive a flat fee for the video plus ongoing commission on sales made through your tracking link or discount code. This is where sponsorships overlap with other YouTube revenue streams, and when done right, it can be the most lucrative format.
Pricing: 50-70% of your standard rate as the base, plus 10-30% commission on sales. The reduced base is offset by the ongoing earning potential.
Sponsorship Package Deals
Smart creators bundle sponsorship formats into packages to increase the deal value while giving brands a discount on individual rates. For example:
| Package | Includes | Pricing |
|---|---|---|
| Starter | 1 integrated mention + pinned comment | 1x base rate |
| Growth | 3 integrated mentions + Community Tab post | 2.5x base rate (vs 3x if bought individually) |
| Premium | 1 dedicated video + 2 integrated mentions + social posts | 4x base rate (vs 5x individually) |
| Annual Partner | 12 integrated mentions + 2 dedicated videos + exclusivity | 12x base rate (vs 18x individually) |
Packages are brilliant for several reasons: they lock brands into longer relationships, increase your total deal value, and give you predictable income over several months. This is exactly the kind of strategy I help creators develop when we work together on building a six-figure business around their channel.
What to Include in Your YouTube Rate Card (Template)
Your rate card should be a professional, visually clean document — ideally 2-3 pages in PDF format. Here is exactly what to include, section by section.
Section 1: Channel Overview
- Your name, channel name, and professional headshot or channel logo
- One-sentence mission statement or channel description
- Your niche and content focus areas
- Notable achievements (play buttons, awards, features)
Section 2: Channel Statistics
- Total subscriber count
- Average views per video (last 30 days and last 90 days)
- Monthly channel views
- Average watch time per video
- Engagement rate (likes + comments as a percentage of views)
- Upload frequency
Using vidIQ’s analytics dashboard makes pulling these numbers easy and gives you polished data you can screenshot directly into your rate card. I recommend updating these statistics quarterly at minimum.
Section 3: Audience Demographics
- Age breakdown (percentage by age range)
- Gender split
- Top 5 geographic locations
- Primary language
- Audience interests and affinities (from YouTube Studio)
Section 4: Sponsorship Formats and Pricing
- Each format you offer (dedicated, integrated, pre-roll, etc.)
- What each format includes (length, number of mentions, links in description, etc.)
- Pricing for each format
- Any packages or bundles with discounted rates
Section 5: Add-Ons and Extras
- Social media cross-promotion (Instagram Stories, Twitter/X posts, etc.)
- YouTube Community Tab posts
- Pinned comment placement
- Email newsletter mention (if applicable)
- Usage rights for brand’s own marketing
- Exclusivity premium
Section 6: Past Partnerships and Case Studies
- Logos of brands you have worked with (with permission)
- 1-2 brief case studies with performance metrics
- Testimonials from previous sponsors
Section 7: Contact and Next Steps
- Your professional email address
- Content turnaround time (typically 2-4 weeks)
- Revision policy (1-2 rounds of script approval)
- Payment terms (50% upfront, 50% on publication is standard)
Pro Tip: Never put “rates are negotiable” on your rate card. It instantly undermines your pricing authority. State your rates confidently. If a brand wants to negotiate, they will — but they will start from your number, not from zero.
How to Calculate Your Specific Rate: Step by Step
Let me walk you through the exact process I use with my consulting clients to calculate their personalised sponsorship rate.
Step 1: Find Your True Average Views
Go to YouTube Studio or use vidIQ and calculate the median view count of your last 30 videos. Use the median, not the mean — this eliminates outliers and gives brands a realistic expectation. If your last 30 videos got anywhere from 5,000 to 200,000 views, the mean might be 30,000 but the median might be 15,000. Use 15,000.
Step 2: Determine Your Niche CPM
Using the niche multipliers above and the baseline sponsorship CPM range (£15-50), determine where your niche falls. A technology channel in the UK might use £35 CPM, while a gaming channel targeting a younger audience might use £18 CPM.
Step 3: Apply the Base Formula
Multiply your median views by your niche CPM and divide by 1,000. This gives you your base integrated mention rate.
Step 4: Apply Adjustments
- Engagement rate above 5%: Add 20-30%
- Audience predominantly in high-CPM regions (UK, US, Canada, Australia): Add 15-25%
- High production quality: Add 15-25%
- Proven sponsorship track record: Add 10-20%
- First sponsorship (no track record): Reduce by 10-15%
Step 5: Calculate All Format Rates
Using your adjusted base rate as the integrated mention price, calculate the other formats:
- Dedicated video: Base rate x 2.5
- Pre-roll mention: Base rate x 0.7
- Product placement: Base rate x 0.4
- Affiliate hybrid: Base rate x 0.6 + commission structure
Worked Example:
A UK tech channel with 45,000 subscribers, 25,000 median views, 6% engagement rate, and high production quality:
Base: 25,000 x £35 / 1,000 = £875
Engagement premium (+25%): £875 x 1.25 = £1,094
Production premium (+20%): £1,094 x 1.20 = £1,313
Integrated mention rate: £1,300 (rounded)
Dedicated video: £3,250 | Pre-roll: £910 | Product placement: £520
Sponsorship Negotiation: 9 Rules for Getting Paid What You Are Worth
Having a rate card is only half the battle. You also need to know how to negotiate effectively. In my experience working with creators on their sponsorship strategies, these nine rules make the biggest difference.
1. Never Accept the First Offer
This is the golden rule. Brands and agencies always start below their maximum budget. Their first offer is typically 40-60% of what they are actually willing to pay. When a brand offers you £500, they likely have £800-1,200 in the budget. Politely counter with your rate card pricing and let the negotiation begin.
2. Understand Brand Budget Cycles
Brands allocate marketing budgets quarterly. Q4 (October-December) has the largest budgets because of Christmas spending. Q1 (January-March) often has fresh annual budgets to spend. Late-quarter deals can sometimes be larger because brands need to spend remaining budget before it disappears. Timing your pitches strategically can increase your rates significantly.
3. Lead With Value, Not Price
Before discussing numbers, make sure the brand understands the value you deliver. Share your audience demographics, engagement rates, and any past campaign results. When a brand sees that your 30,000-view video reaches 25-34-year-old UK professionals with a 7% engagement rate, your £2,000 rate suddenly looks very reasonable compared to the £5,000+ they would spend on equivalent reach through paid advertising.
4. Add Value Instead of Reducing Price
If a brand pushes back on your rate, never simply lower it — that signals your original price was inflated. Instead, offer added value at the same price: “I cannot reduce the rate, but I can include a Community Tab post and an Instagram Story mention.” This maintains your rate integrity while giving the brand more perceived value.
5. Know Your Walk-Away Number
Before entering any negotiation, decide the absolute minimum you would accept. Factor in your time, production costs, and opportunity cost (every sponsored video is a slot that could have been an organic video performing well for your channel). If the brand cannot meet your minimum, politely decline. Scarcity increases your value for the next opportunity.
6. Get Everything in Writing
Never start work on verbal agreements. Have a contract that covers deliverables, timeline, payment terms, revision limits, usage rights, and exclusivity clauses. This protects both you and the brand, and it demonstrates professionalism.
7. Charge for Usage Rights
Many brands want to repurpose your content in their own advertising — on their website, social media, or even in paid ads. This is worth significant money because they are getting premium content at a fraction of the cost of producing an advert. Charge 30-100% extra for usage rights, depending on the scope and duration.
8. Leverage Competing Offers
If you have multiple brands interested in similar sponsorship slots, you can ethically use this to your advantage. “I have another brand in the same space interested in this slot — I want to give you first right of refusal at my standard rate.” This creates urgency without being dishonest.
9. Build Long-Term Relationships
The most profitable sponsorships come from repeat partnerships. A brand that sponsors one video per month for a year is worth far more than 12 different one-off deals. Offer loyalty discounts for multi-video agreements and deliver exceptional results to encourage renewal. Repeat clients also mean less time pitching and negotiating.
Key Takeaway: Negotiation is a skill that improves with practice. Your first few deals will feel awkward — that is completely normal. The important thing is to have your rate card ready, know your numbers, and never accept less than your walk-away price. For a deeper dive into negotiation tactics, read my complete guide on YouTube brand deal negotiation.
Using Analytics to Strengthen Your Rate Card
The difference between a rate card that gets ignored and one that closes deals comes down to data. Brands make decisions based on numbers, and the more compelling data you can present, the higher rates you can command.
Here are the analytics you should be tracking and presenting to potential sponsors:
- Average view duration — proves your audience actually watches your content, not just clicks and leaves
- Click-through rate (CTR) — demonstrates your thumbnails and titles are compelling, which translates to sponsored content engagement
- Returning viewer percentage — shows you have a loyal, repeat audience (more valuable for brand awareness campaigns)
- Traffic sources — search-driven traffic is particularly valuable because it indicates purchase-intent viewers
- Description link click rates — if you track this, it directly proves your audience takes action on your recommendations
I recommend using vidIQ alongside YouTube Studio for analytics tracking. vidIQ’s channel audit features give you a competitive analysis view — you can see how your metrics compare to similar channels in your niche, which is incredibly powerful when justifying your rates to brands. If a brand questions your pricing, showing that your engagement rate is in the top 10% of channels in your size range is extremely persuasive.
For a complete understanding of what each metric means and how to interpret your numbers, read my guide on YouTube analytics explained.
Common Rate Card Mistakes That Cost Creators Money
In my consulting work, I review creators’ rate cards regularly. Here are the most common mistakes I see — and each one costs real money.
Pricing Based on Subscribers Instead of Views
Subscribers are a vanity metric for sponsorship pricing. A channel with 100,000 subscribers averaging 5,000 views is far less valuable than a channel with 20,000 subscribers averaging 15,000 views. Always base your rates on actual views delivered, not subscribers accumulated.
Not Accounting for Long-Tail Views
YouTube videos continue generating views for months and years after publication. If your sponsored video gets 20,000 views in the first month but accumulates 100,000 views over two years, the brand gets five times the value they paid for. Factor this into your pricing — especially if you create evergreen content.
Forgetting to Price Your Time
Sponsored content takes longer to produce than organic content. You have to coordinate with the brand, review their brief, potentially script the sponsorship segment, incorporate feedback, make revisions, and handle the administrative side. Add at least 20-30% to your base rate to cover this additional time investment.
One-Size-Fits-All Pricing
Not all sponsors are equal. A venture-backed SaaS company with a £2 million annual marketing budget can afford far more than a bootstrapped startup. While you should not wildly change your rates, having flexible packages allows you to work with brands at different budget levels without underselling yourself to the ones with deep pockets.
Not Updating Rates as You Grow
I have seen creators who set their rates at 10,000 subscribers and never updated them, even after reaching 100,000. Your rates should increase as your channel grows. Review and adjust quarterly, or after any significant growth milestone.
Seasonal Rate Adjustments: When to Charge Premium Prices
Sponsorship budgets are not evenly distributed throughout the year, and your rate card should reflect this. Here is a seasonal breakdown based on what I have seen across hundreds of creator partnerships:
| Quarter | Budget Level | Rate Adjustment | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 (Jan-Mar) | Medium-High | Standard rate | Fresh annual budgets; New Year campaigns |
| Q2 (Apr-Jun) | Medium | Standard rate | Steady but not peak; summer planning |
| Q3 (Jul-Sep) | Medium-Low | Standard or slight discount for long-term deals | Summer slowdown; good time to lock in Q4 contracts |
| Q4 (Oct-Dec) | Very High | +20-40% premium | Holiday spending; brands must spend remaining budget |
The smartest move is to pitch brands in Q3 for Q4 campaigns. You secure the deal before competition heats up, and you can lock in your premium rate while brands are still planning their holiday marketing strategy.
Sponsorships as Part of a Broader Revenue Strategy
Sponsorships are one of the most lucrative YouTube income sources, but they should not be your only one. The most financially resilient creators I work with have multiple revenue streams working simultaneously — AdSense, sponsorships, affiliate income, digital products, and services.
When you diversify, sponsorship negotiations actually become easier because you are not desperate. You can afford to walk away from lowball offers because your income does not depend on any single deal. This is exactly the kind of comprehensive approach I help creators build through my coaching programmes — not just individual tactics, but a complete business strategy around your channel.
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Frequently Asked Questions About YouTube Sponsorship Rate Cards
What is a YouTube sponsorship rate card?
A YouTube sponsorship rate card is a professional document that outlines your pricing for different types of brand collaborations. It typically includes your channel statistics, audience demographics, available sponsorship formats (dedicated video, integrated mention, pre-roll, etc.), pricing for each format, and any package deals or bundled offerings. Think of it as a menu that brands can review when considering working with you.
How much should I charge for a YouTube sponsorship?
YouTube sponsorship rates vary widely based on channel size, niche, and engagement. As a general guide: channels with 1K-10K subscribers can charge £50-300 per video, 10K-50K subscribers £300-1,500, 50K-100K subscribers £1,500-5,000, 100K-500K subscribers £5,000-15,000, and 500K+ subscribers £15,000 or more. High-value niches like finance, technology, and business can command significantly higher rates.
What is a good CPM rate for YouTube sponsorships?
A good CPM (cost per mille/thousand views) for YouTube sponsorships typically ranges from £15-50, depending on your niche. Finance and business channels can command £40-80+ CPM, technology channels £25-50, lifestyle and beauty £15-35, and gaming channels £10-25. These are sponsorship CPMs, which are significantly higher than AdSense CPMs because sponsors pay a premium for creator endorsement and audience trust.
Should I use CPV or flat rate pricing for sponsorships?
For most creators, flat rate pricing based on your average view count is the safest option because it guarantees your income regardless of how a specific video performs. CPV (cost per view) pricing can work well if your videos consistently overperform, but it carries more risk. Many experienced creators use a hybrid model with a guaranteed base rate plus a CPV bonus for views exceeding your average, giving you a safety net with upside potential.
How do I negotiate a higher sponsorship rate?
Never accept the first offer — brands almost always have budget flexibility. Present your rate card confidently and back it up with data including your average views, engagement rate, audience demographics, and past sponsorship performance. Highlight your niche authority and audience purchasing power. Offer tiered packages so the brand can choose their investment level. If they counter low, add value rather than dropping price by including social media posts or Community Tab mentions.
Do I need a large channel to get sponsorships?
No. Brands increasingly value micro-influencers with engaged, niche audiences over large channels with passive viewers. Channels with as few as 1,000 subscribers can land sponsorships if they have strong engagement rates and a clearly defined audience. For a step-by-step guide to landing your first deal at a smaller channel size, read my guide on how to get YouTube sponsorships with under 10,000 subscribers.
What should I include in my YouTube rate card?
Your rate card should include: channel overview and mission statement, subscriber count and average views per video, audience demographics (age, gender, location, interests), engagement metrics (likes, comments, CTR), available sponsorship formats with pricing for each, package deals or bundles, past brand partnerships and case studies, content turnaround times, and your contact information. Keep it professional, visually clean, and no longer than 2-3 pages.
How often should I update my sponsorship rate card?
Update your rate card at least every quarter, or whenever your channel metrics change significantly. If you gain a substantial number of subscribers, your average views increase, or your engagement rate shifts noticeably, update your rates accordingly. Many creators also update seasonally because Q4 (October-December) sponsorship budgets are typically higher, allowing you to charge premium rates during that period.
What is the difference between a dedicated video and an integrated sponsorship?
A dedicated video is entirely focused on the sponsor’s product or service — the whole video is about reviewing, demonstrating, or discussing it. An integrated sponsorship is a mention or segment within your regular content, typically lasting 30-90 seconds. Dedicated videos command higher rates (often 2-3x more) because the brand gets full attention, but integrated sponsorships are more common and feel more natural to audiences, often generating better engagement.
Should I charge more for exclusivity in sponsorship deals?
Absolutely. If a brand wants exclusivity — meaning you cannot work with their competitors for a set period — charge a significant premium, typically 30-50% above your standard rate. Exclusivity limits your earning potential by blocking deals with competing brands, so the requesting brand should compensate you for that lost revenue. Always define the exclusivity period clearly in your contract and never agree to open-ended exclusivity clauses.
Final Thoughts: Know Your Worth and Price Accordingly
If there is one thing I want you to take away from this guide, it is this: you are almost certainly undercharging. Every creator I have worked with in my 20+ years in this space was initially surprised to learn what their content was actually worth to brands. The sponsorship market is not a charity — brands pay for access to your audience because it drives real revenue for their business, and they budget accordingly.
Building a professional rate card is not just about having a document to send out. It is about understanding your value, pricing with confidence, and entering every negotiation from a position of strength. The formula is straightforward: know your metrics, understand your niche premiums, price your formats appropriately, and never accept the first offer.
Start by pulling your analytics today — vidIQ makes this easy with its free plan — and run through the calculation formula in this guide. Build your rate card this week, not “someday.” The next brand that contacts you deserves a professional response with clear pricing, and you deserve to be paid fairly for the audience you have built.
If you want personalised help calculating your rates, building your rate card, or developing a complete sponsorship strategy for your channel, book a free discovery call. Sponsorship strategy is one of the most common topics in my consulting sessions, and it is where I have seen the fastest financial impact — creators who price correctly often double or triple their sponsorship revenue within a single quarter.
About Alan Spicer
Alan Spicer is a YouTube Certified Expert and 20+ year content creator with 6 Silver Play Buttons. A former vidIQ team member and certified YouTube consultant, Alan has helped hundreds of creators and businesses grow their channels through expert audits, coaching, and data-driven strategy.
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