How to Make Money on YouTube with Math Animation Videos
You make math or science animation videos. Instagram doesn't pay creators. YouTube does. Here's exactly how to get there.
You make math or science animation videos. Instagram doesn't pay creators. YouTube does. Here's exactly how to get there.
Instagram does not share ad revenue with creators. You can grow a massive audience and earn nothing from the platform itself. Sponsorships exist, but they require you to negotiate every deal individually.
YouTube has a formal program that pays you automatically every month based on the ads shown on your videos. Once you're in, the money comes without you chasing brands.
YouTube is also just a better fit for education. People search for explanations. A video about the Pythagorean theorem gets found by students for years.
The Partner Program has two tiers.
This tier unlocks channel memberships and Super Thanks, but not ad revenue yet.
Once you hit Tier 2, you apply and YouTube reviews your channel within about a month. After approval, you link an AdSense account and ads start running on your videos.
YouTube pays you based on RPM (Revenue Per Mille): how much you earn per 1,000 views after YouTube takes its 45% cut. Education channels typically earn $4 to $15 RPM, depending mostly on where your audience is and what you're teaching.
| Monthly views | RPM | Monthly earnings |
|---|---|---|
| 10,000 | $5 | $50 |
| 50,000 | $5 | $250 |
| 100,000 | $7 | $700 |
| 500,000 | $7 | $3,500 |
| 1,000,000 | $10 | $10,000 |
Math and science for US or European audiences tends to land at the higher end. Topics like calculus, linear algebra, and physics attract EdTech advertisers like Coursera and Skillshare, who pay well. Channels aimed at South or Southeast Asia earn significantly less, usually $0.50 to $1.50 RPM, because the ad market there is smaller.
8 minutes is the number that matters. Videos under 8 minutes only get pre-roll ads, the ones that run before the video starts. Go over 8 minutes and YouTube lets you add mid-rolls, which run during the video and pay a lot more.
Aim for 10 to 15 minutes. That's enough to explain something properly and still fit 2 or 3 mid-roll breaks.
Anything under 5 minutes is better as a Short, good for growth rather than revenue. Long videos (20+ minutes) can work, but only if people actually stick around.
A format that works: 10 to 12 minutes, one concept, end with a worked example.
YouTube has tightened its standards for monetization. Channels that use AI-generated scripts read over stock footage, recycled clips from other creators, or low-effort compilations get rejected or demonetized. The pattern is the same: the content exists to exist, not to teach anything.
What works is animating the math itself, showing why something is true rather than just saying it. That's original by definition. Every Manim animation is rendered fresh. Most channels can't say that.
What slows most education channels down is production. Writing Manim by hand for a 10-minute video takes days. With Animo, you describe what you want and it generates the Manim code, renders it, and gives you an MP4.
Most people get a 10-minute video done in an afternoon. One video per week is realistic if you're doing this alone.
Show up every week. One video a week adds up fast, and every upload is indexed forever.
What actually grows math channels:
Watch your YouTube Studio analytics after posting. Videos that hold attention past 50% of their length get pushed by the algorithm. If a video drops off at 2 minutes, look at what's happening at that point and fix it in your next upload.
The requirements are 1,000 subscribers and 4,000 watch hours. The way to get there is one original video a week. Animo handles the Manim so you don't have to.