YouTube 600 亿美元收入曝光,正推动付费订阅。
YouTube's $60B revenue revealed amid paid subscriber push

原始链接: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/crkrkd2xlx6o

## YouTube 收入超越流媒体竞争对手 谷歌最近透露,YouTube 在 2025 年的收入超过 600 亿美元,超过了 Netflix 的 450 亿美元——这是谷歌自 2006 年收购 YouTube 以来首次公开披露 YouTube 的年度收入。该数字包括广告收入和付费订阅,如 YouTube Premium,后者目前在谷歌服务中拥有超过 3.25 亿订阅用户。 尽管 2025 年第四季度广告收入略有下降,但谷歌强调了 YouTube 的整体增长,这得益于无广告观看和订阅用户的后台播放等功能。YouTube 正在日益成为数字生活的重要组成部分,超过 70% 的国际消费者每周都在使用它。 该平台正在超越“猫咪视频”,成为电视领域的参与者——甚至从 2029 年开始举办奥斯卡颁奖典礼。然而,创作者们对谷歌的 AI 概述对他们内容流量的影响表示担忧,引发了欧洲和英国监管机构的调查。谷歌仍然致力于大力投资 AI,尽管存在这些担忧。

## YouTube巨额收入 一份最新报告显示,YouTube的收入达到600亿美元,超过了Netflix的450亿美元。这个数字包括广告和付费订阅。 Hacker News上的讨论集中在将YouTube与Netflix进行比较是否合理,一些人质疑YouTube的运营成本,因为它依赖用户生成的内容。另一些人指出,谷歌为YouTube支付的收购价格现在看起来非常精明。 虽然收入数据是公开的,但运营大规模YouTube的实际成本仍然未知,引发了人们对理解该平台盈利能力超出表面数据的兴趣。总体情绪倾向于认可YouTube是谷歌一项非常成功的收购。
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原文

YouTube's $60bn revenue revealed amid paid subscriber push

Liv McMahonTechnology reporter
Getty Images A silhouetted hand holding a smartphone in front of a background of YouTube's red and white logo.Getty Images

Google has revealed YouTube brought in more than $60bn (£44bn) in revenue in 2025 as the firm targets getting more subscribers.

The figure, which totals the money generated through advertising on YouTube as well as paid subscriptions, far surpasses streaming rival Netflix's $45bn revenue.

It appears to be the first time Google has individually highlighted its video platform's yearly revenue since acquiring it in 2006.

Midia Research senior analyst Hanna Kahlert said while it was a big announcement, it was "perhaps not a surprising one" - with the platform becoming "almost infrastructural for digital natives".

"YouTube is one of – if not the – most-used of all digital offerings, with over 70% of international consumers using it weekly, and over 50% using it daily," she told the BBC, citing Midia consumer survey data.

Kahlert said the different ways the platform makes money - such as through adverts, or charging a monthly subscription to remove them - means it can "capitalise well" on its large audience.

While YouTube's global ad revenue in the last three months of 2025 fell below Wall Street expectations at $11.38bn (£8.37bn), Google boss Sundar Pichai highlighted YouTube's broader growth as part of a "fantastic year" for the company.

He said YouTube Premium - its service letting users pay to remove ads between videos, or songs on its music service - had helped boost paid subscriptions across Google consumer services to more than 325 million in 2025 overall.

The company has not released YouTube's own subscriber numbers.

But Philipp Schindler, Google's chief business officer, told investors on an earnings call on Wednesday YouTube was seeing "strong traction" in subscriptions.

He said it has been "innovating to meet consumers where they are" with new, cheaper YouTube TV and Premium tiers.

The firm has also been trying to find more ways to get people to subscribe - such as only allowing Premium users to play videos in the background on smartphones.

At the same time, Shorts, YouTube's TikTok-style short videos, was also said to be averaging more than 200 billion daily views.

'Not just cat videos anymore'

As it celebrated its 20th birthday last year, YouTube swelled to become the second most-watched media service in the UK after the BBC, according to Ofcom.

Ofcom later found the platform was used by 94% of UK adult internet users, with time spent on it growing to reach an average of 51 minutes a day per person.

The UK's public service broadcaster recently announced plans to make shows for YouTube in a landmark deal.

YouTube's $60bn revenue in 2025 meanwhile beat that of rival Netflix - though Forrester analyst Mike Proulx said it was not an "apples-to-apples comparison".

"The lion's share of YouTube's content is user-generated versus 'Hollywood'-generated," he said.

"YouTube is not just cat videos anymore," Netflix boss Ted Sarandos told US lawmakers in a Senate hearing on Tuesday about its plans to buy Warner Bros.

"YouTube is TV".

Netflix has recently sought to ink deals with content creators, including popular YouTubers, in an effort to boost its own offerings.

Getty Images A content creator holds up a cardigan on a hanger while facing at a smartphone recording her on a stand with a ring light.Getty Images
YouTube also believes creators will be key to maintaining its revenue growth.

But some creators, including the world's biggest MrBeast, have voiced concern about the impact of AI.

The rise of tools like Google's AI Overviews, its AI-generated summaries of search results, have been linked by some to dips in traffic to their videos, sites and content.

The European Commission launched an investigation in December to examine the impact of Google's AI summaries on content creators and web publishers.

The UK's markets regulator has since proposed measures to give publishers more controls over the appearance of their work in Google's AI summaries and products.

Google said it believed it could "find a path forward that provides even more choice to website owners and publishers".

But the company pledged in its latest results to plough even more money into AI - something big tech bosses say they will spend eye-watering sums on this year.

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