YouTube Channel Analytics


 


YouTube Channel Analytics & Earnings Estimator — Views, Subs, CPM & Monetization

Paste a YouTube Channel URL, @handle, or Channel ID, hit Analyze, and get a clean report:
views, subscribers, video count, growth insights, CPM estimates, and a realistic monthly earnings range.

Quick reality check: earnings and CPM are shown as a range because real revenue depends on factors public data can’t fully see
(viewer countries, ad fill, ad formats, seasonality, and how many views are monetized).

What this tool does (in plain English)

YouTube gives creators detailed analytics inside YouTube Studio, but as an outsider — or even as a creator who just wants a fast snapshot —
it’s not always convenient to dig through multiple screens. This tool is built for those “just tell me what’s happening” moments.

It pulls together a channel summary, recent growth stats, topic detection, CPM estimates, and charts so you can understand performance
without bouncing between a dozen tabs.

How to use the analyzer

  1. Copy a YouTube channel link (or the channel’s @handle or Channel ID).
  2. Paste it into the input field labeled Channel URL / @handle / ID.
  3. Click Analyze.
  4. Review the dashboard cards and charts to understand performance.

Tip: If you’re comparing channels, analyze them back-to-back and look at the last 30 days views + daily averages.
Lifetime totals can be misleading.

What you’ll see in the report

The dashboard is designed to answer the common questions people actually have:
How big is this channel? Is it growing right now? What’s the earning potential?

Channel summary

  • Channel name, Channel ID, and sometimes country
  • Created date + age (years/days)
  • Total views, subscribers, and videos

Recent performance windows

  • Views last 7 days (what’s happening right now)
  • Views last 30 days (baseline used for monthly estimates)
  • Views last 365 days (big picture trend)

Growth overview

  • Days tracked
  • Views gained (period)
  • Subscribers gained
  • Average views/day and subscribers/day
  • Best day (views) + date

Topic & CPM estimate

  • Detected topic (example: Music)
  • Estimated CPM range for that topic

Charts

  • Daily stats chart (last 30 days): views and subscriber changes

How to read the growth overview (the part that matters most)

If you only have 30 seconds, look at Average views/day and Average subs/day.
Those two numbers tell you whether the channel has ongoing momentum or whether you’re looking at a past hit.

A big “best day” spike can mean a viral upload, a shoutout, a trending keyword, or even traffic from an external site.
That’s not bad — it’s just something you should know before making decisions based on a single graph.

Simple way to compare channels: use the same window (like last 30 days) and compare daily averages,
not lifetime totals.

Topic detection & CPM range

CPM (Cost Per Mille) is the price advertisers pay per 1,000 ad impressions. On YouTube, CPM can swing wildly.
Two channels with the same topic can have very different CPMs depending on audience location and advertiser demand.

That’s why the tool shows a range instead of pretending there’s one “magic CPM number.”
Use it as a direction, not a guarantee.

  • Higher CPM is common when audiences are in higher ad-spend countries and content is brand-friendly.
  • Lower CPM often happens with mixed geographies, limited monetization, or low advertiser demand periods.

Estimated monthly earnings (what it means)

The estimated monthly earnings box is a rough projection based on:
recent views (typically last 30 days) and an estimated CPM range.
It’s intentionally shown as a range because public data cannot confirm the exact monetized playbacks.

Real earnings can be higher or lower due to monetized view ratio, ad formats, watch time, audience location,
and whether the channel earns outside ads (sponsorships, memberships, affiliates).

Best use: comparing channels or understanding the revenue “scale” (small vs medium vs large).
It’s not a replacement for YouTube Studio revenue analytics.

Daily stats chart (last 30 days)

The daily chart is where patterns become obvious. Spikes often align with uploads, mentions, or trending keywords.
A smooth, steady incline usually indicates evergreen content — the kind that keeps bringing views without constant publishing.

If you’re a creator, this is a simple way to see whether your publishing schedule is actually moving the needle.
If you’re analyzing a channel for a partnership, it helps you spot “one-time virality” versus stable, consistent traffic.

Can this tool tell if a channel is monetized?

It can give you signals, but it can’t “confirm monetization” with absolute certainty from public data alone.
Monetization depends on eligibility, policy checks, and channel settings that aren’t always visible publicly.

What this tool can do is show whether a channel has enough recent view volume and advertiser-friendly topic signals
to make monetization plausible, and it provides a CPM/earnings range accordingly.

Who this is for

Creators

  • Quickly check growth momentum without digging through multiple screens
  • Spot view spikes and understand whether subscribers follow views
  • Track performance windows (7/30/365 days) side-by-side

Brands & agencies

  • Vet channels before sponsorship conversations
  • Compare channels in the same niche using the same time windows
  • Estimate traffic scale and consistency using daily averages

Researchers & competitors

  • Monitor trends in a niche
  • Spot breakout channels early
  • Understand long-term activity vs short-term spikes
Optional (recommended): add a short “Why we built this” paragraph with your real story.
Unique context = stronger SEO + better trust.

Why we built this: [Write 2–4 sentences here about why you created this tool, what problem it solved for you,
and what you noticed when comparing channels. Real details make this page stand out.]

FAQ

Can I analyze any YouTube channel?
Yes. Paste a channel URL, @handle, or Channel ID and run the analysis.
How often is the data updated?
Each scan pulls fresh public information available at the time of analysis. If you rescan later, you may see updated numbers.
Are the earnings estimates accurate?
They’re directional estimates shown as a range. Real earnings depend on monetized views, audience location, ad formats, and other factors.
What does CPM mean?
CPM is the cost advertisers pay per 1,000 impressions. On YouTube it varies by geography, topic, and advertiser demand.
Does this replace YouTube Studio?
No. It’s meant as a fast, external snapshot. YouTube Studio is still the source of truth for your exact revenue and internal analytics.

Disclaimer: This page provides estimates and publicly visible statistics. Earnings and CPM are shown as ranges and may not match a channel’s actual payout.

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