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Content Cash Cow

How to sell a YouTube channel

Yes, you can sell a monetized YouTube channel. It is a digital asset, and buyers pay real money for proven, transferable income. More creators are selling, and buyer demand for proven channels keeps growing. Here is how a sale works in plain terms, and what to prepare before you list.

Is your channel sellable?

A channel sells when a buyer can step in and keep earning. Four things matter most:

If that sounds like your channel, you have something a buyer wants. If it does not yet, most of the gap is fixable before you list.

Where channels sell

You have two paths: a marketplace, or a private deal. For most sellers a marketplace is the simplest start. It brings more buyers, handles escrow, and runs the transfer in the right order. Here is where channels actually change hands, from the widest reach to the most hands-on. They all work the same way underneath: list, verify, agree, then transfer through escrow.

Flippa (start here)

Small and mid-sized channels. The largest buyer pool, and where most channel sales happen. How it works: List it yourself on an open marketplace. Above a certain size you can also work with a Flippa broker who runs the sale for you. Cost: A success fee when it sells, lower than the curated brokers. Use the optional broker and you pay an added service fee. Escrow is built in.

Empire Flippers

Larger, proven channels, usually six figures and up. They vet the channel and the buyers. How it works: Curated and hands-on. It works the same way as Flippa, just done for you: they verify your numbers, list it, and run the sale with a migration team. Cost: A higher success fee, because they handle the whole sale and the escrow for you.

FE International

High-value sales where you want an M&A advisor, often well into six or seven figures. How it works: Full advisory. A dedicated advisor handles valuation, buyer vetting, and the legal side. Cost: A negotiated advisory fee that gets smaller as the deal gets bigger.

FameSwap

Smaller channels and creator accounts, with a large, creator-focused buyer pool. How it works: A lighter creator marketplace with built-in escrow. Faster, but vet your buyer carefully. Cost: A success fee when it sells, with escrow built in.

Some marketplace links are affiliate links. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. We are not responsible for these third-party marketplaces.

A private sale

You sell directly to a buyer you find yourself, often another creator or an investor. You keep more control and skip listing fees, but you bring your own buyer, and you arrange your own escrow through a service like Escrow.com.

Flippa is the right start for most channels, because it is built for small and mid-sized sellers and has the largest pool of buyers. Empire Flippers, FE International, and a broker only make sense once your channel is larger and you want the sale run for you. Fees and minimums are set by each platform and change, so check the current terms before you list. Some links here route through us and may pay a small referral fee at no extra cost to you, and we only point to platforms we would use ourselves.

How a sale works, step by step

What to prepare before you list

The biggest price gains come before a buyer ever sees the channel. Two things to get right:

What is it worth?

Most small channels sell on a multiple of monthly profit. The multiple goes up when your revenue is diversified, your content is evergreen, and your numbers are easy to verify. It goes down with face dependency, decline, or risk. For the full picture and a free calculator, see the YouTube channel valuation guide.

Your next step

Start with the free Channel Checkup. It scores your channel in about two minutes and shows where you stand. When you want the action plan, the Fix-First Report ($39) explains how buyers think, what raises your price, and what to fix first.

Frequently asked questions

Can you really sell a YouTube channel? +

Yes. A monetized channel with steady revenue is a digital asset. Channels change hands on marketplaces like Flippa and Empire Flippers and in private deals every week, and buyer interest in proven, low-risk channels keeps growing.

How much is my channel worth? +

Most channels sell on a multiple of monthly profit, and the multiple rises with clean revenue, real systems, and verifiable proof. Start with the free Channel Checkup for a quick read, then see how valuation works.

Do I have to hand over my account to prove revenue? +

No. Add the buyer as a read-only Manager during due diligence. They verify views and revenue in YouTube Studio without your password and without taking control, and you remove the access when verification ends.

What kind of channel sells? +

A channel that is monetized, earns steadily, has assets you can hand over, and carries low risk for the buyer. The cleaner and more documented it is, the more interest you get.

Where do I sell it? +

Most owners list on a marketplace like Flippa or Empire Flippers, or arrange a private sale with a buyer they already know. Flippa suits small and mid-sized channels and has the most buyers. Empire Flippers is for larger, vetted sales. Private sales give you more control.

How long does a sale take? +

It varies by channel and price. Preparing proof and systems is usually the slow part. Once a buyer commits, due diligence, escrow, and transfer follow. Good preparation shortens the whole process.

Not sure where your channel stands?

Two minutes, no card. Get your Sellability Score and the one thing to fix first.