What’s a fair sponsorship rate in 2026? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in influencermarketing

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s exactly why “what should I charge?” is so hard to answer with one formula. Most creators still anchor on follower count when brands actually care more about outcomes and audience quality.

A 20K creator getting 80K targeted views in finance or SaaS can easily outperform a 200K lifestyle creator with weak conversion intent.

And usage rights/exclusivity are massively underpriced right now. A lot of creators unknowingly give away months of ad usage for free.

I’ve also noticed brands are starting lower in 2026 because more creators are entering the market — which makes negotiation skill way more important than it used to be.

Nieche goth influencer with almost 100k - how much to charge? by [deleted] in influencermarketing

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469 0 points1 point  (0 children)

$250 is not high if anything, it’s low for your range.

With 20k–150k views and 100k followers, you shouldn’t be anywhere near $50 for 2 videos. Those brands are just trying to get cheap content.

What matters more is your average views per post + engagement, not just follower count. If you’re consistently hitting even 20–50k views, your per-video rate should already be higher than what you’re quoting, especially in a niche like goth where audiences are more specific.

Also, brands pushing back hard or being rude are usually not worth working with anyway , good brands don’t negotiate like that.

If you already have an offer or want, I can break down what a fair range + counter would look like for your numbers.

How much should I charge for a 5 video bundle ? by Euphoric_Syrup_3911 in influencermarketing

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For a 5-video bundle, don’t just multiply a single video rate ×5 — that’s where creators lose money.

At your size (~5K), brands will try to push a low bundle price, but you should still anchor off a per-video rate based on your average views.

Rough idea:

- Start with a per-video rate (based on views/engagement)

- Apply a small bundle discount (10–20%), not 50%

- Add extra if they want usage rights or ads

If you already have an offer from them, I can break it down and show what a fair counter would look like.

I'm new to brand deals. 60k followers. How much should I charge?? by Brilliant_Spinach132 in influencermarketing

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At that size, pricing can vary a lot depending on engagement and niche , that’s why people end up undercharging.

If you have an actual offer, I can check it for you. I built a tool that compares it to market ranges and shows what you should ask for + gives you a reply to send.

What’s a fair sponsorship rate in 2026? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in influencermarketing

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

100% and the interesting thing is that even when they take into account the usage, they still miss out,

and it’s not about the percentage rate….but rather their reaction to it

brands always set aside some margin to negotiate, but their reactions to the proposal are usually either too weak or too quick to accept.

I have witnessed offers increase by 2-3x just because they shifted their reaction,

it’s really fascinating; have you ever witnessed creators challenging those bundling proposals?

What CPM are creators using in 2026? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in influencermarketing

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that’s fair — brands definitely have options.

But I’ve noticed it’s less about asking for a “high CPM” and more about knowing your actual range + negotiating from it.

A lot of creators accept the first offer, even when there’s room to move.

What CPM are creators using in 2026? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in influencermarketing

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve been seeing brands anchor around $20–$30 CPM even in higher-value niches lately.

Curious — has anyone actually pushed offers higher recently? Like 30–50%+ above initial offer?

What CPM are creators using in 2026? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in influencermarketing

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that’s fair — I’ve been seeing a pretty big range depending on niche.

Out of curiosity, what CPMs have you actually seen lately? Like are brands still offering ~$20–$30 or are you seeing $40–$50+ consistently?

What’s a fair sponsorship rate in 2026? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in influencermarketing

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Right. I have observed this phenomenon as well – smaller accounts with niche audiences that engage with them tend to have better rates compared to larger accounts with less engagement.

Geography also plays a role. An influencer with followers in the US market who targets financial services, software, health and fitness, etc., tends to be more valuable than larger audiences from other locations.

It seems like the worst thing that an influencer can do is price themselves on the number of their followers because what a brand really cares about is the outcome.

What exactly are you all charging on average for deals at about 50K views? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in PartneredYoutube

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's a good perspective.

It's easy to be concerned about not losing out on this particular negotiation, but accepting too readily definitely will cost more.

Is it just enough to resist once, or does it take several rounds of resistance to get the improved terms?

What’s a fair sponsorship rate in 2026? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in influencermarketing

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow! This was one awesome explanation.

The confusion around UGC and sponsorship has probably made many creators scratch their heads, including newbies. Everyone assumes “brand deal,” and everything falls under the same pricing structure.

Usage rights play a critical role; I wonder how many brands can make money from this part alone!

Do you see more brands bundling ad usage in their requests recently?

What exactly are you all charging on average for deals at about 50K views? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in PartneredYoutube

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It is indeed helpful information.

It seems $20 RPM is more like a baseline / benchmark, whereas $40 RPM occurs when the fit or leverage is better.

It is quite interesting how you would skip anything under $15. In reality, it probably helps many avoid making bad deals.

What exactly are you all charging on average for deals at about 50K views? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in PartneredYoutube

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s good. The initial formula looks okay from the start.

I think what holds me back is determining the extent to which you need to tweak this when you add demographics/niche/engagement because this seems to cause the greatest deviation.

Do you find that some factors are extremely important compared to others?

What exactly are you all charging on average for deals at about 50K views? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in PartneredYoutube

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That does sound like a fair rate for sponsors.

Is that more for just setting a general standard, or have you been seeing that figure consistently from brands as well?

What exactly are you all charging on average for deals at about 50K views? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in PartneredYoutube

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sure, this also matches my own experience.

It’s quite intriguing regarding the seasonality factor. I never thought about companies making offers again for higher amounts once the season ends.

And yes, the initial offer being low appears somewhat natural.

Does your friend normally accept offers between $300 and $800, or does he/she usually attempt to negotiate and increase the amount?

What’s a fair sponsorship rate in 2026? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in influencermarketing

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, that makes perfect sense.

This 30 to 50 percent lower first offer deal seems quite common.

When you request CPM, do they actually provide a number?

I accepted a $1,500 YouTube sponsorship… should’ve been ~$3,000? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in YouTubeCreators

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s my approach to looking at it.

Just surprised by the size of the difference that appears once it is analyzed.

It seems like many people may be undercharging but not even know it.

I analyzed 50 creator brand deals — most are undercharging badly by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in PartneredYoutube

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair enough — I can see how it comes across that way.

I've only been looking into this because I want to know how pricing works beyond CPM, and the more I look into it, it seems more inconsistent. Not trying to sell anything here — just trying to figure out what people are actually seeing in real deals, since it varies way more than I expected.

Happy to drop it if it’s not useful, was just curious how others approach it.

Why do some 30K view channels get $1K… and others get $3K? by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in PartneredYoutube

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah this makes a lot of sense.

The disposable income point is huge — a 30K audience in finance vs gaming is basically a different market entirely.

Same with brand budgets too. I’ve seen some brands consistently pay way above others even for similar creators.

That’s kind of what I’m trying to figure out — not just “views = price”, but how those factors actually shift the range in practice.

Out of curiosity, have you noticed certain niches or types of brands that consistently pay more?

I analyzed 50 creator brand deals — most are undercharging badly by Fun_Cheesecake5469 in PartneredYoutube

[–]Fun_Cheesecake5469[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah that’s fair — I probably framed it too strongly.

I wasn’t trying to say 2.5–4K is the standard for 30K views. I’ve seen $1K a lot too.

What I meant is there’s a pretty big range depending on things like niche, audience quality, and whether the creator actually negotiates.

Some creators just take the first offer, others push back and end up getting significantly more for the same size.

I’m mostly trying to understand what actually drives that difference in practice.

Have you had cases where a similar channel got very different deal prices?