 Can you find out how much money any YouTuber makes on any day for free instantly right now? Yes, I think I can. Hello, I'm Neil Mosse and I'll show you this website which seems to have all of our statistics. I'm a development producer and it's my mission to help creators and performers, just like you, to get ideas out of our heads and out onto here on YouTube where we need them. And to prove it, here's actual footage of me standing next to a monitor in a TV studio, sometime, somewhere, working very, very, very hard. So this is the website right here. It's called socialblade.com. I don't think you'd need to even create a login for it to work. And to show you how it works and how easy it is on the top right hand corner here, there's a pull down menu so you can look up anything, Twitch, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, TikTok. We're going to stick with YouTube. Let's type in a random name, let's say PewDiePie. And instantly it opens up a page for PewDiePie. On the top banner, this is really humbling. Should we be comparing ourselves to other people? That's for a whole other video. But let's take a look just in the very first statistic. The number of uploads is 4,208. 4,208. Oh my goodness. Leave a comment below. Should we be comparing ourselves at all? Should we even be doing this? I think we should. We'll carry on. It's better to be armed with information, I guess. The number of subscribers is 107 million. It shows you the video views. It takes a guess at the country that you're from. I believe this might be incorrect. I always thought he lived in the UK. And it's got a channel type. I don't know how they guess the channel type. I think it's from the largest number of categories that you have in your videos. I make this channel how-to, but you'll see in a minute it lists me as people. And the dates the channel was created. And down here, right, these are where, oh my goodness, look at these figures. So Social Blade gives you a grade and it has graded PewDiePie as a grade, but only 260 seconds as their Social Blade rank. I've no idea what that is. This is their own ranking system. PewDiePie according to Social Blade is the fourth biggest subscriber in the world and his video views are 19th in the world. So this is quite interesting. PewDiePie is first in the US. Again, doesn't he live in Bryson and isn't he Swedish? I'll have to ask my 11 year old son, but this is understandable. It ranks him as first in the gaming category. I thought DanTDM was there. Maybe not. Now we're going to be putting these statistics to the test in a minute, but Social Blade tells you how many subscribers the channel has gained in the last 30 days. And it takes a crack at estimating what the monthly earnings are for the channel. So I guess this was the title of the video. How much does a YouTuber earn? Social Blade uses its algorithm to take a guess at £556,000 per month for PewDiePie. There's some other statistics here as well. The number of video views for the last 30 days. The total subscribers. Now it looks like there are no subscribers on these weeks, but that's obviously because when you're up at that grade, grade A PewDiePie, the only figure that's released is a whole million. Although it says zero subscribers in that time, it's obviously going up in that time and it's not publicly released by YouTube as a figure until it hits the next one million subscribers. So you can see how frequently he gained another million subscribers. And from the monthly earnings, it takes a guess at the estimated yearly earnings according to socialblade.com. Their estimate is £6.7 million. Oh, it's giving it in pounds. So you might not be watching this in the UK. I wonder if we can change. There we go. I'm just pretending that I'm in the United States thanks to a VPN. $10 million. Socialblade estimates $856,000 a month. $10.3 million a year. Now I don't know why on video views it goes down by 334 million views. There was a glitch a few weeks ago and I think it might be because YouTube was doing some behind the scenes stuff and it does kind of make me feel slightly less confident on how sound these figures are. But I'm going to be testing them in a minute on my own channel. So we'll see how accurate any of this is. The next section on the socialblade.com page is breaking down video views every day. Well, it does more than that. So we've got the date on the left. We've got the number of subscribers that have gone up, but that only goes up by the figures that are released by YouTube. We've got video views. Oh my goodness. So PewDiePie gets about roughly somewhere between 5 and 8 million views a day. This figure next to the green video views is the total number of views ever. So I think isn't that 26 billion views? My maths are a little out. And I get thrown by billions being a thousand million rather than a million million. But I think that's 26 billion views in total. And then on the right hand side, this is this is pretty interesting as well. Estimated earnings. Each day, socialblade estimates that PewDiePie earns about $30,000 per day. The next section down is a nice curvy graph, just to show you an idea of the monthly gained video views for PewDiePie. Oh, by the way, if you want to try this out for yourself, the link is in the description. Don't go there yet. We're going to show you the compare function and I'm going to put my figures in and compare them with the reality of how much I earn so we can see how accurate any of these figures are. The next cool thing you can do with socialblade is this button right in the top right hand corner where it says compare. We can compare YouTube channels and statistics. So the channel we've already put in PewDiePie is in this first box here. In the second box, I'm going to put in my favorite YouTuber, Casey Neistat, and we'll hit compare channels. And instantly it lines them up against each other. On the left, we have PewDiePie in the gaming category. On the right, we have Casey Neistat on the people category. And interestingly, socialblade rates Casey Neistat as B+, Casey Neistat. Now it compares the two channels. So PewDiePie is the red line on this graph. This is for the total number of subscribers. And along the bottom, which is slightly more level than PewDiePie, is Casey Neistat at a mere, what, 14 million subs? I know it's 12 million. But you can see instantly the two channels lined up against each other. The next section down is estimated potential earnings. So it compares those estimates against each other. Socialblade records that PewDiePie is on about $27,000 a day, whereas Mr. Neistat, our friend Casey, is on $5,255 a day, which means monthly that's 833K against 157K. And for the year, whoa, look at that. $10 million for PewDiePie and $1.8 million for Casey Neistat. And on the daily averages for views and subscribers, there's another graph there. But it is useful to see just a sort of ballparky how a channel is doing. I've obviously chosen two really extreme examples. So he's on 1,053 uploads. Do you know what? Of all the metrics, of all the statistics on this page, I think the only one that I'm looking at for me is the number of uploads. Just the only thing I've got to concentrate on right now. And the estimated daily earnings, they kind of fluctuate around the $7,000 per day mark. But how accurate is that? There's only one way to find out. I'm going to put me in the box to see how much money that Socialblade thinks that I'm getting. And maybe I should compare that with what I'm actually getting. We'll be able to see how accurate this mail may not be. So here's my channel. 316 uploads. 2.45,000 subscribers. So it took me two years to get 1,000 subscribers. It took me another six months to get the next thousand. I'm nearly just about to hit the 1 million video views. So I should make a video about that, shouldn't I? Hey, by the way, if this video is at all interesting or helpful, it would really help me and help others to find this if you give it a thumbs up. Obviously, you know how cherished your subscription is. If you hit the subscribe button, I'm going to be making some more videos like this if you're finding them helpful. So Socialblade, I'll keep my picture in there. Socialblade has given me a grade of C plus. Could do better. Weirdly, I got B plus back in February when I had a video that was doing crazy number of views. 1.1 millionth on the Socialblade rank in the world. 1.3 millionth in the most number of subscribers. According to this, I'm the 77,000th YouTuber in the UK. So proud of that. It's put my channel type as people, which is a shame because I think for the last year I've been choosing how to for my videos. Right now, here's an interesting thing. It's that it thinks that my monthly earnings are $171 a month. According to my YouTube studio dashboard, I'm pulling in $247 per month. I don't know how representative my channel is and it really isn't. It's a very broken poor little channel. But Socialblade's estimate is that I earn $171 a month and I don't. I do actually earn near a $250 at the moment. Yeah, 247. So let's take a look at the daily figures over on Socialblade. It's saying that my video views average about $1,500 a day and that's absolutely correct. Yeah, this is pretty much what I get every two days at the moment. That's $2,800, $1,400 a day and Socialblade have got those figures absolutely accurate. I don't know why it suddenly drops $1,700 on Friday. I think there's some kind of data correction going on with YouTube at the moment, which is why you get these weird negative figures. The number of subscribers, this column here is absolutely accurate. That is exactly what's going on. I get about 10 subscribers every other day. The estimated earnings, this is like the really crucial one and it's probably what's throwing off that monthly figure. Socialblade reckons, I'm getting about $6 or $7 a day. But if I go over to my analytics in my YouTube studio, I'll run the cursor across. You see, every day I'm getting sort of about $8, $8, $10, $9. I'm getting lots of 8s, 9s, 10s, 12s. So it's slightly off. These estimated earnings, they're slightly lower and I don't know, maybe I'm getting a crazy CPM at the moment or RPM, the cost per thousand. Maybe mine's slightly higher than Socialblade. I'm certainly not getting $0.38 per day. I'm getting nearer $8 a day. So these figures are slightly off. If you're monetized, maybe you might want to have a look at Socialblade, let me know in the comments if this is slightly off for you too. It'd be really interesting to know how your earnings compare with Socialblade's estimate of your earnings. I know I shouldn't be doing this now, but I've hit the compare button. Go ahead and type in KC9 stat. This is the only time ever my name will appear next to PewDiePie and KC9 stats. So in the left corner, we've got C plus, Neil Mosey, we've got B plus, KC9 stats and an A grade PewDiePie. Look at this graph. I do not even get off the zero mark. But if you do want to, you know, do some light psychological damage by comparing yourself to people who have made literally thousands more videos than you have, Socialblade.com is exactly the place you want to go right now. The link is in the description. Down here is my full story of how much money I'm earning at the moment. And up here is what YouTube thinks you should be watching next.