A lot of creators chase monetization like it’s a finish line. It isn’t. It’s the gate that opens new earning tools, more trust from the platform, and a clearer path to turning a channel into a business.
That gate also moved. In 2026, the numbers that matter are not the old ones floating around forums and outdated blog posts. If you want to qualify now, you need the current YouTube Partner Program rules and a channel that’s ready for review.
The YouTube Partner Program rules you need to meet first
YouTube now has two entry points. One gives smaller channels earlier access to some earning features. The other is the full level most creators want.

The official YouTube Partner Program page lays out both paths, but the quick view below makes the difference easier to see.
| Level | Subscribers | Activity requirement | Long-form path | Shorts path |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Early access | 500 | 3 valid public uploads in 90 days | 3,000 valid public watch hours in 12 months | 3 million valid public Shorts views in 90 days |
| Full monetization | 1,000 | No extra upload rule beyond eligibility review | 4,000 valid public watch hours in 12 months | 10 million valid public Shorts views in 90 days |
The big takeaway is simple: these are rolling windows. Your watch hours and Shorts views are measured over recent time periods, not over the life of your channel.
Early access: the smaller milestone that opens the door
Early access starts at 500 subscribers. You also need three valid public uploads in the last 90 days, plus either 3,000 valid public watch hours in the last 12 months or 3 million valid public Shorts views in the last 90 days.
This tier can unlock limited monetization features earlier. It does not mean full ad revenue across the board. Think of it as a side door, not the main entrance.
Shorts views from the Shorts Feed don’t turn into watch hours. They count in a separate bucket.
Full monetization: the level most creators are aiming for
Full monetization starts at 1,000 subscribers. Then you need either 4,000 valid public watch hours in the last 12 months or 10 million valid public Shorts views in the last 90 days.
This is the standard route to ad revenue and more advanced earning options. It also makes one thing clear: long videos and Shorts both work, but they play by different math.
What else YouTube checks before it approves a channel
Hitting the numbers can feel like climbing a hill. Then review starts, and some creators learn there is another hill behind it.
YouTube doesn’t approve channels on metrics alone. It also checks whether the channel looks safe, real, and policy-compliant.
Account setup and eligibility basics
Before approval, your channel needs the basics in place. You must live in a country where YPP is available. You also need to be 18 or older for a standard AdSense setup, or otherwise meet payment requirements through an approved arrangement. In addition, your Google account needs 2-step verification, your phone number should be verified, and advanced features should be enabled.
You also need an active AdSense for YouTube account linked to the channel. These steps may feel small, but they’re trust signals. YouTube wants proof that a real creator is behind the uploads, and that the account can be paid properly if approval goes through.
Content rules that can make or break approval
This is where many channels stumble. YouTube checks your channel against its monetization policies, Community Guidelines, and advertiser-friendly standards.
Original content matters a lot. Reused compilations, low-effort slideshows, AI-heavy uploads with little human value, or videos built from other people’s clips can hurt approval. Active strikes also raise risk. Even if one video popped off, YouTube reviews the channel as a whole, not a single lucky upload.
How the application and review process works
Once you qualify, the process is simple on paper. In practice, patience matters.

What happens after you hit the threshold
When your analytics show that you’ve met the requirement, head to YouTube Studio and open the Monetization tab. From there, the flow usually looks like this:
- Review the eligibility status in Studio.
- Accept the YPP terms.
- Link or create your AdSense account.
- Submit the channel for review.
The YouTube Help overview explains the path clearly. After you apply, YouTube reviews your channel manually. Some creators pass quickly. Others get flagged for setup issues or content quality problems first.
Why some applications get rejected and how creators can try again
Rejections often come from four places: policy violations, reused content, missing account setup, or a channel that feels thin and inconsistent. A viral video can’t hide weak uploads around it.
If that happens, fix the root problem before applying again. Clean up old videos if needed. Improve titles and thumbnails if they look misleading. Add more original work that shows your voice. A stronger channel usually matters more than a faster re-application.
How to stay monetized after you get approved
Approval is not permanent ink. It’s closer to a lease that renews while your channel stays healthy.
That means growth still matters, but trust matters too.
Keep your numbers above the line
Because YouTube uses rolling windows, old views and watch time can expire. For example, a channel might cross 4,000 watch hours in April, then fall under that line in June if older watch time drops out of the 12-month window and new videos slow down.
Subscriber counts can shift too. Most channels won’t lose access overnight from a small dip, but dropping below thresholds can put monetization features at risk over time. Keep publishing, and keep your audience active.
Protect your channel with consistent policy-safe content
One careless upload can create real trouble. Copyright claims, misleading titles, harmful content, and advertiser-unfriendly topics can limit revenue or block it.
Steady creators usually last longer because they build two things at once: audience interest and platform trust. If your channel grows on clean, original videos, monetization becomes easier to keep.
Final thoughts
The 2026 rules are clear once you strip away the noise. Early access starts at 500 subscribers with lower watch-hour or Shorts-view thresholds, while full monetization starts at 1,000 subscribers and a higher bar for reach.
Still, the numbers only get you to the door. Monetization also depends on clean setup, original content, and a channel that stays within policy. Build for the long run, and the income side has a much better chance of lasting.
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