← Back to Blog How to Research a YouTube Niche Before You Commit

How to Research a YouTube Niche Before You Commit

Devon Canup · March 2026 · 10 min read

Most people pick a niche based on what they're interested in. That's backwards. You should pick a niche based on data, then learn to be interested in it.

Step 1: Check the CPM Range

Use Social Blade, VidIQ, or TubeBuddy to estimate CPMs for channels in your target niche. If the CPM is under $6, you need massive scale to make it work. We generally recommend niches with $8+ CPMs for beginners.

Step 2: Count the Competition

Search your target topics on YouTube. Look at channels that have posted in the last 30 days:

Step 3: Analyze View Counts

Look at channels with under 50K subscribers in your niche. If their videos regularly get 10K+ views, the niche has demand that isn't being met by existing large channels. That's your opening.

Step 4: Test Content Producibility

Can you produce a video in this niche for under $100? Can you do it 2-4 times per week? If the answer to either is no, the niche might be right but the economics don't work at your budget level.

Step 5: Check Advertiser Demand

Google your niche + "advertise" or check Google Ads Keyword Planner. If companies are actively spending on ads in this space, CPMs will be healthy. If there are no advertisers, your CPM will be floor-level regardless of views.

The 48-Hour Test

Before committing, produce one video. Not a perfect one, just a functional one. See how the process feels. If it takes you 20 hours, this niche will burn you out. If it takes 3-4 hours, you've found something sustainable.

Ready to Build Your Channel?

Book a free strategy call with an FCA Advisor. They'll evaluate your niche, review your situation, and give you a straight answer on whether FCA is right for you.

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