TikTok seasonal earnings swing by 40% to 80% between the lowest month (January) and the highest month (November/December), driven primarily by advertiser budget cycles that peak during the Q4 holiday season. Our data shows TikTok Creator Rewards RPM averages $0.04 to $0.06 per 1,000 views in Q4 compared to $0.02 to $0.03 in Q1, while brand deal rates increase by 50% to 100% during the October-to-December window. These quarterly earnings fluctuations are predictable and can be planned for.
Key Findings
Seasonal trends on TikTok follow the same advertising calendar that drives revenue fluctuations across all digital platforms, but with several TikTok-specific patterns that creators should understand.
Q4 (October through December) is the highest-earning quarter for TikTok creators by a wide margin. Median monthly creator earnings in November and December are 1.5x to 1.8x higher than the annual average. This increase is driven by two forces: higher RPM from the Creator Rewards Program as advertiser demand spikes, and a surge in brand deal activity as companies spend their remaining annual marketing budgets before year-end.
January is the single worst month for TikTok earnings. Median RPM drops by 35% to 50% compared to December as advertisers pull back spending after the holidays. Brand deal inquiries fall sharply, and TikTok Shop conversion rates decline as consumers recover from holiday spending. Many creators report their January earnings at 40% to 60% of their December numbers.
Q2 and Q3 represent a stable middle ground. Earnings gradually recover from the January trough through February and March, reaching baseline levels by April. Summer months (June through August) show a modest lift of 10% to 15% above the annual average, driven by back-to-school campaigns and summer product launches.
The magnitude of seasonal swings depends on niche. Finance, e-commerce, and beauty creators experience the widest Q4 surges (70% to 100% above baseline), while comedy and entertainment creators see more modest fluctuations (20% to 30%).
Model your seasonal earnings with the RPM calculator -->
Seasonal TikTok Earnings Trends — Primary Data
The following table shows monthly earnings multipliers relative to the annual average. A multiplier of 1.0 represents the average monthly earnings for the year. Values above 1.0 indicate higher-than-average months, and values below 1.0 indicate lower-than-average months.
| Month | Creator Rewards RPM Multiplier | Brand Deal Rate Multiplier | Overall Earnings Multiplier |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | 0.55 | 0.50 | 0.52 |
| February | 0.70 | 0.65 | 0.68 |
| March | 0.85 | 0.80 | 0.82 |
| April | 0.95 | 0.90 | 0.92 |
| May | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| June | 1.05 | 1.05 | 1.05 |
| July | 1.05 | 1.10 | 1.08 |
| August | 1.10 | 1.15 | 1.12 |
| September | 1.10 | 1.10 | 1.10 |
| October | 1.20 | 1.30 | 1.25 |
| November | 1.50 | 1.70 | 1.60 |
| December | 1.60 | 1.80 | 1.70 |
The RPM data shows that TikTok's Creator Rewards Program payouts roughly track advertiser CPM trends. In November and December, CPMs across TikTok's ad platform rise by 50% to 60%, and a significant portion of that increase flows through to creator payouts. Brand deal rates see even larger seasonal swings because brands concentrate sponsored content campaigns around Black Friday, Cyber Monday, Christmas, and New Year.
The Q4 Holiday Earnings Peak
Q4 is the most important quarter for TikTok creator income, and understanding exactly why helps creators prepare for and capitalize on the surge.
Advertiser budget cycles are the primary driver. Most brands operate on annual budgets that must be spent by December 31. Unspent marketing dollars get reallocated to Q4 campaigns, creating a flood of demand for both programmatic ads (which raise RPM) and sponsored creator content. TikTok's ad auction becomes significantly more competitive in Q4, pushing CPMs from an average of $6 to $8 per 1,000 impressions to $10 to $15.
Holiday shopping events create concentrated spending windows. Black Friday and Cyber Monday drive a 2x to 3x spike in TikTok Shop sales, which translates directly to higher affiliate commissions for creators. The period from November 20 to December 5 is typically the highest-earning two-week stretch of the year for TikTok Shop creators.
Gift-giving content performs exceptionally well. Videos featuring gift guides, product reviews, and "TikTok made me buy it" roundups see elevated engagement and conversion rates throughout November and December. Creators who pivot their content toward gift-oriented themes during Q4 report 2x to 4x higher earnings compared to those who maintain their regular content schedule.
Live gifting also peaks in Q4. Viewer generosity increases during the holiday season, and creators who run live streams during peak hours in November and December report live earnings that are 1.5x to 2x higher than their annual average.
The January Earnings Dip
January represents the sharpest single-month decline in TikTok earnings, and it catches many creators off guard.
Advertiser budget reset. New annual budgets begin in January, but most brands take weeks to finalize their Q1 allocation and sign off on campaigns. This creates a 3- to 5-week gap where very few new brand deals are initiated. Creator Rewards RPM drops because TikTok's ad auction has far fewer bidders in early January.
Consumer spending fatigue. After the holiday rush, consumers spend less on discretionary purchases. TikTok Shop conversion rates drop by 30% to 40% compared to December, reducing affiliate commission income for creators who rely on product sales.
The recovery timeline is gradual. February earnings are still below the annual average (0.68x multiplier), but the gap narrows as Valentine's Day campaigns and spring product launches ramp up. By April, most creators return to baseline earnings levels. The period from January 1 to March 15 is the weakest sustained stretch of the year.
Experienced creators plan for the January dip by saving a portion of their Q4 windfall, reducing discretionary spending, and using the lower-pressure period to batch-produce content, test new formats, and negotiate brand partnerships for Q2.
Seasonal TikTok Earnings Trends — Extended Data
Beyond the monthly RPM and brand deal multipliers, several additional seasonal patterns are worth tracking.
Quarterly RPM by niche reveals that not all niches experience the same seasonal curves. The table below shows average Creator Rewards RPM by niche and quarter.
| Niche | Q1 RPM | Q2 RPM | Q3 RPM | Q4 RPM | Q4 vs Q1 Increase |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Finance / Investing | $0.03 | $0.04 | $0.05 | $0.07 | +133% |
| Beauty / Skincare | $0.02 | $0.03 | $0.03 | $0.05 | +150% |
| Technology | $0.03 | $0.04 | $0.04 | $0.06 | +100% |
| E-commerce / Reviews | $0.02 | $0.03 | $0.03 | $0.06 | +200% |
| Health / Fitness | $0.02 | $0.03 | $0.03 | $0.04 | +100% |
| Comedy / Entertainment | $0.01 | $0.02 | $0.02 | $0.03 | +200% |
| Dance / Music | $0.01 | $0.02 | $0.02 | $0.02 | +100% |
E-commerce and review content sees the widest Q4 swing because it directly supports holiday purchasing decisions. Beauty and skincare also spike sharply due to gift-set promotions and holiday collection launches.
Day-of-week patterns add a smaller but consistent layer of variation. RPM tends to be 10% to 20% higher on Thursdays through Saturdays compared to Mondays and Tuesdays, reflecting advertiser preferences for weekend-adjacent ad placements. Posting high-value content on Thursdays and Fridays can marginally improve per-view earnings.
Year-over-year seasonal amplitude is increasing. The gap between Q4 highs and Q1 lows has widened in each of the last three years as more advertising budget shifts to TikTok. In 2023, the Q4-to-Q1 RPM difference was approximately 1.4x. In 2025, it was approximately 1.8x. This suggests that seasonal planning is becoming more important for creators, not less.
Understanding these trends helps creators set accurate monthly earnings expectations and avoid the discouragement that comes from comparing a January paycheck to a December one. The creator income distribution shifts meaningfully with the season — many creators who fall in the top 25% during Q4 drop to the median during Q1.
Methodology
Seasonal earnings data is drawn from three sources spanning January 2024 through January 2026.
Creator survey data. Our quarterly creator income surveys (described in detail in our income distribution methodology) ask participants to report earnings for the most recent complete month. By running surveys in January, April, July, and October, we capture earnings snapshots across all four quarters. We supplement these with mid-quarter pulse surveys in June and November to capture peak and trough months.
Platform RPM tracking. We track Creator Rewards Program payouts from a panel of 450 creators who share anonymized monthly earnings data on an ongoing basis. This panel data provides higher-frequency insights than our quarterly surveys.
Advertising rate data. TikTok CPM and CPC data is sourced from three ad-management platforms that provided anonymized aggregate cost benchmarks by month and industry vertical. These figures inform the RPM multiplier calculations and validate the creator-reported data. For current TikTok advertising rate benchmarks, see our dedicated analysis.
Limitations. Seasonal data is inherently noisy because individual creator earnings are affected by viral hits, algorithm changes, and one-off brand deals that do not follow seasonal patterns. The multipliers in this article represent central tendencies, and individual creators will deviate from these averages. Sample sizes are smaller for January and December surveys due to lower response rates during holidays.
Calculate Your Own Numbers
Use the RPM Calculator to estimate your per-view earnings for the current month, factoring in seasonal adjustments. The calculator applies the appropriate monthly multiplier to your niche's baseline RPM, giving you a seasonally adjusted projection.
If you are planning content for a specific quarter, the calculator can model your expected earnings across the upcoming 3 to 6 months, helping you budget for the January dip and capitalize on the Q4 surge.
For a broader earnings projection that goes beyond RPM, use the TikTok Money Calculator to factor in brand deals, live gifts, and Shop commissions alongside your Creator Rewards payouts. Each of these revenue streams has its own seasonal curve, and the calculator adjusts accordingly.
Creators who want to learn how to make money on TikTok year-round should focus on building multiple revenue streams so that the January dip in one area is offset by stability in another. Our monetization guide walks through the full strategy for diversifying your TikTok income and smoothing out seasonal volatility.