You’ve been watching the videos. People like you making significant income on YouTube, and thought “how can I get in on that?”. Well, I’m going to outline the beginner basics of how to qualify for monetization on YouTube.
You’ve probably seen the basic “you need 1,000 subscribers to get paid on YouTube” from someone who hasn’t checked the requirements since 2019. That number’s still real, but it’s not the whole story today in 2026. There are two tiers now, and most people don’t realize they can start earning way before they hit four digits.
Here’s what actually gets you paid, and in what order.
Tier 1: the door you didn’t know was already unlocked
Once your channel hits 500 subscribers, 3 public videos, and either 3,000 watch hours in the last 12 months or 3 million Shorts views in the last 90 days, you’re eligible to apply for early access. This won’t get you ad revenue yet. What it does get you is Super Thanks, channel memberships, and YouTube Shopping — real income streams, just not the ad checks people picture when they hear “monetized.”
Most creators sit around waiting for 1,000 subscribers to even bother applying. That’s leaving money on the table for months, sometimes years, for no reason. If you’re past the 500 mark, apply. There’s no penalty for getting in early.
Tier 2: the one everyone’s actually chasing
Full ad revenue kicks in at 1,000 subscribers, plus one of two paths:
- 4,000 valid public watch hours in the past 12 months, or
- 10 million Shorts views in the past 90 days
Notice the word “valid” doing a lot of work in that first option. Watch hours only count if the video was public and actually showed up in someone’s feed — not unlisted, not private, not you replaying your own upload at 2am hoping it moves the needle.
The other requirements nobody mentions until you get rejected
Subscriber count is the flashy number, but it’s not the only thing needed. You also need:
- No active Community Guidelines strikes. Even if your numbers are perfect, one live strike parks your application until it clears.
- Two-step verification turned on for your Google account.
- A linked AdSense account — this is how you actually get paid, so set it up before you apply, not after.
- Residency in an eligible country. The list covers over 100 countries, but it’s not universal, so check before you build your whole plan around a payout that isn’t available where you live.
Skip any one of these and no matter how high your subscriber count, you won’t get paid.
Content quality is the key
YouTube’s gotten a lot more aggressive about what it calls inauthentic content — mass-produced compilations, recycled clips with a voiceover slapped on top, AI scripts wearing a human’s face. If your channel is mostly repurposed content, you can hit every number on this list and still get rejected. Original commentary, real editing, and your own original concepts are what separates “creator” from “aggregator” in YouTube’s eyes, and aggregators are the ones getting weeded out first.
Shorts changed the math, but not the rules
Shorts can get you to either tier faster than long-form ever could — 3 million views in 90 days for early access, 10 million for full monetization. That’s genuinely a fast track for channels that are good at short-form. But watch hours from Shorts in the Shorts feed don’t count toward the 4,000-hour long-form threshold, so pick your lane. Mixing formats and hoping the numbers blend together is how people end up confused about why they’re still not approved.
Most creators stall out not because the numbers are unreachable, but because they’re aiming at Tier 2 from day one and ignoring the door that opened at 500 subscribers, get discouraged and quit posting. Hit the smaller number first. Get the smaller wins flowing to keep you motivated.
