Creators are posting the same content across all three platforms. But the payouts are wildly different. Here's what each platform actually pays in 2025.
The Short Answer
YouTube Shorts pays the most. By a significant margin.
| Platform | Avg. Pay per 1M Views | Payment Model |
|---|---|---|
| YouTube Shorts | $30 - $50 | Ad revenue share (45%) |
| TikTok | $5 - $10 | Creator Fund / Creativity Program |
| Instagram Reels | $0 - $20* | Bonuses (invite-only, inconsistent) |
*Instagram Reels bonuses vary wildly and aren't available to most creators.
Let's break down each platform's payment structure and why these numbers look the way they do.
YouTube Shorts: The Highest Payer
How it works
YouTube runs ads between Shorts in the feed. Revenue from these ads goes into a pool, which is divided among creators based on their share of total Shorts views. Creators in the YouTube Partner Program get 45% of their allocated revenue.
Requirements to get paid
- 1,000 subscribers
- 10 million Shorts views in 90 days, OR
- 4,000 watch hours on long-form content
Typical earnings
Most creators report earning $0.03 to $0.05 per 1,000 views on Shorts. That means:
- 100K views = $3 - $5
- 1M views = $30 - $50
- 10M views = $300 - $500
Why it pays more
YouTube has established relationships with premium advertisers and a mature ad ecosystem. Even with the Shorts revenue share being lower than long-form (45% vs 55%), the ad rates are much higher than other short-form platforms.
TikTok: Lower Payouts, Bigger Reach
How it works
TikTok has two programs:
- Creator Fund (older, being phased out) - pays based on views
- Creativity Program Beta (newer) - higher payouts for videos over 1 minute
Requirements to get paid
For the Creativity Program:
- 10,000 followers
- 100,000 views in the last 30 days
- Videos must be over 1 minute long
- Original content only
Typical earnings
Creator Fund (sub-1-minute videos): $0.005 - $0.01 per 1,000 views
Creativity Program (1+ minute): $0.50 - $1.00 per 1,000 views
The catch: the Creativity Program requires longer videos and stricter originality requirements. Most short clips don't qualify.
Why it pays less
TikTok's ad business is younger than YouTube's, and they're still optimizing monetization. The Creator Fund was also criticized for having a fixed pool that didn't scale with the platform's growth, meaning per-view rates dropped as more creators joined.
Instagram Reels: The Least Reliable
How it works
Instagram offers Reels bonuses to select creators. There's no public program anyone can join - you either get invited or you don't.
Requirements
- Get invited by Instagram (no public criteria)
- Professional or Creator account
- Meet bonus-specific targets (varies by offer)
Typical earnings
Creators who do get bonuses report anywhere from $100 to $35,000 per month, depending on the offer and their views. But many creators with millions of Reels views have never received a bonus offer.
Why it's unreliable
Instagram's parent company Meta has repeatedly started and paused creator payment programs. The Reels bonus program has been scaled back multiple times. You can't build a reliable income on a platform that might cancel your payments at any time.
Real Creator Earnings Compared
Let's say you have a video that gets 1 million views on each platform:
| Platform | 1M Views Earnings | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| YouTube Shorts | $30 - $50 | Consistent, if you're in YPP |
| TikTok (Creator Fund) | $5 - $10 | For short videos |
| TikTok (Creativity Program) | $500 - $1,000 | Only for 1+ minute original videos |
| Instagram Reels | $0 - ??? | Only if you have a bonus offer |
The math is clear: for typical short-form content under 60 seconds, YouTube Shorts pays 3-10x more than TikTok's Creator Fund.
Beyond Direct Payments: The Bigger Picture
Direct platform payments are just one piece of creator income. Consider:
Brand deals and sponsorships
TikTok often leads here. Brands love TikTok's engagement rates and younger demographic. A creator with 100K TikTok followers can often command higher sponsorship rates than one with 100K YouTube subscribers.
Driving traffic to other income
YouTube excels at this. Shorts viewers can discover your long-form content, join memberships, buy merch, or click affiliate links. The platform is designed for deeper engagement.
Audience ownership
YouTube subscribers tend to be more "sticky" than TikTok followers. YouTube's subscription model means your audience is more likely to see your new content.
Which Platform Should You Focus On?
The smart answer: all of them, but prioritize based on your goals.
If you want maximum direct revenue:
Focus on YouTube Shorts. The payouts are highest, and the revenue is reliable once you're in the Partner Program.
If you want fastest growth:
TikTok's algorithm is still the best at surfacing new creators. Use it to build an audience, then bring them to YouTube.
If you already have an Instagram following:
Keep posting Reels to stay visible, but repurpose that content to YouTube Shorts to actually get paid for it.
The optimal strategy for most creators:
- Create content
- Post to TikTok (fast growth potential)
- Repurpose to YouTube Shorts (better payouts)
- Repurpose to Reels (maintain Instagram presence)
This way you maximize reach AND revenue without creating three times the content.
How to Repurpose Efficiently
Posting to three platforms sounds like triple the work, but it doesn't have to be:
- Same video, different titles: Adjust titles for each platform's style
- Remove watermarks: Don't post TikToks with the watermark to YouTube
- Mind the length: Shorts max at 60s, TikTok and Reels allow longer
- Batch upload: Set aside time to upload to all platforms at once
Tools like GoShorts automate this workflow - download from TikTok/Instagram, generate platform-specific titles, and schedule uploads to YouTube. What takes 30+ minutes manually can happen in seconds.
The Bottom Line
For pure payouts on short-form video:
- YouTube Shorts - Best pay ($30-50 per 1M views), reliable
- TikTok - Lower pay for short videos, but Creativity Program pays well for 1+ minute content
- Instagram Reels - Unreliable, invite-only bonuses
If you're creating short-form content and not posting to YouTube Shorts, you're leaving real money on the table. The platforms aren't mutually exclusive - post everywhere, but make sure YouTube is part of your strategy.