Live rankings

Australia flagTop 50 Cooking & Food channels in Australia

Cooking is one of the most evergreen categories on YouTube. People search for specific recipes year after year, and a single high-quality recipe video can bring in views for a decade. The biggest cooking channels combine that long-tail SEO benefit with personality-driven content: trips to markets, technique deep-dives, restaurant reviews, and chef-vs-chef showdowns.

Australia is the smallest tier-1 YouTube market by population but punches above its weight in creator output. Australian RPMs are similar to UK levels (slightly below US), and Australian channels often build large international audiences because the cultural and linguistic distance to North America is small enough that content travels easily.

Live data, updated 3d ago

The leaderboard

36 channels
#1Village Cooking Channel
Village Cooking Channel
9.9B views · 276 videos
30.7M
subscribers
#2Tasty
Tasty
6.4B views · 6.7K videos
21.3M
subscribers
#35-Minute Recipes
5-Minute Recipes
3.5B views · 6.1K videos
10.3M
subscribers
#4Grandpa Kitchen
Grandpa Kitchen
1.4B views · 635 videos
9.4M
subscribers
#5Village Food Channel
Village Food Channel
2.1B views · 577 videos
9.2M
subscribers
#6Hebbars Kitchen
Hebbars Kitchen
3.2B views · 3.2K videos
8M
subscribers
#7Your Food Lab
Your Food Lab
1.8B views · 1.8K videos
7.2M
subscribers
#8Veg Village Food
Veg Village Food
2.3B views · 740 videos
6.6M
subscribers
#9Jamie Oliver
Jamie Oliver
1.1B views · 2.8K videos
6.2M
subscribers
#10Essen Recipes
Essen Recipes
1.3B views · 669 videos
5.6M
subscribers
#11Nick's Kitchen
Nick's Kitchen
815.3M views · 139 videos
4.8M
subscribers
#12Food Wishes
Food Wishes
1.1B views · 2.4K videos
4.7M
subscribers
#13The Tiny Foods
The Tiny Foods
1.3B views · 226 videos
4M
subscribers
#14Laura in the Kitchen
Laura in the Kitchen
698.1M views · 2.3K videos
4M
subscribers
#15Royal Cooking
Royal Cooking
1.6B views · 294 videos
3.7M
subscribers
#16Allrecipes
Allrecipes
787.7M views · 4.9K videos
3.4M
subscribers
#17Kun Foods
Kun Foods
615.2M views · 782 videos
3.3M
subscribers
#18Food Network
Food Network
1.2B views · 8.5K videos
3.3M
subscribers
#19Taste Show
Taste Show
379.6M views · 165 videos
3.3M
subscribers
#20Side Dish Recipes
Side Dish Recipes
1.7B views · 479 videos
3.2M
subscribers
#21Miniature Cooking
Miniature Cooking
536.5M views · 228 videos
2.3M
subscribers
#22Souped Up Recipes
Souped Up Recipes
328.8M views · 552 videos
2.2M
subscribers
#23Poorna - The nature girl
Poorna - The nature girl
464.5M views · 106 videos
1.9M
subscribers
#24She Cooks
She Cooks
991M views · 6.6K videos
1.9M
subscribers
#25Recipe30
Recipe30
222.4M views · 1.2K videos
1.6M
subscribers
#26Recipes of the world
Recipes of the world
278M views · 1K videos
1.4M
subscribers
#27Masala TV Recipes
Masala TV Recipes
237.8M views · 22.1K videos
1.4M
subscribers
#28NYT Cooking
NYT Cooking
242.3M views · 1.1K videos
1.3M
subscribers
#29Yummy Food World
Yummy Food World
169.5M views · 280 videos
1.1M
subscribers
#30In The Kitchen With Gina Young
In The Kitchen With Gina Young
161.4M views · 2.8K videos
1.1M
subscribers
#31Village Kitchen
Village Kitchen
225.3M views · 379 videos
1M
subscribers
#32Joshua Weissman Recipes
Joshua Weissman Recipes
91.4M views · 96 videos
816K
subscribers
#33My Village Food Recipes
My Village Food Recipes
188.3M views · 618 videos
780K
subscribers
#34Helen's Recipes (Vietnamese Food)
Helen's Recipes (Vietnamese Food)
107.5M views · 1.2K videos
658K
subscribers
#35Food Network UK
Food Network UK
259M views · 1.6K videos
648K
subscribers
#36N'Oven Foods
N'Oven Foods
163.6M views · 2.1K videos
609K
subscribers
What sets them apart

The cooking & food channels winning in Australia.

01

Recipe videos have the longest tails on YouTube: a 2018 recipe still ranks and earns in 2026.

02

Production-light: a phone, a tripod, and clean lighting beats most early-career cooking channels.

03

Tier-1 RPMs despite the smaller population: Australian audiences trigger premium ad inventory.

04

Strong international travel: Australian content frequently builds 50-80% non-Australian audiences.

Frequently asked

Cooking & Food in Australia, answered.

Real questions about how the cooking & food niche operates inside the Australia market. Still curious? Get in touch.

How long should a cooking video be on YouTube?

Recipe videos hit a sweet spot at 6–12 minutes: enough room for ingredients, technique, and a bit of personality without padding. Pure technique deep-dives can stretch to 15–25 minutes if the topic warrants it (e.g. bread, BBQ, knife skills). Avoid hitting 8 minutes artificially just for mid-rolls, viewers feel padded videos and bounce, which kills the algorithm signal that funds the next upload.

Do cooking YouTubers buy their own ingredients?

Most do. Brand sponsorships are usually for kitchen tools, appliances, or grocery delivery services rather than ingredients themselves. Some channels work with farms or speciality ingredient suppliers for paid integrations, but the biggest cooking creators usually pay for ingredients out of pocket so editorial independence is obvious.

What's the typical RPM for a cooking channel?

Cooking is mid-tier on RPM, usually $3–$8 per 1,000 views in the US, lower internationally. The category sits below finance and tech but above gaming and entertainment. Sponsorships for kitchen gear, knife brands, meal-kit services, and cookware push effective income well above the AdSense rate, especially for channels with strong editorial trust.

Can an Australian YouTube channel reach a global audience?

Easily, and most established Australian channels do. English-language Australian content with universal subjects (food, fitness, tech, lifestyle) typically builds 50-80% non-Australian audiences over time. The cultural and linguistic distance to North America is small enough that content travels naturally without localisation.

What are Australian YouTube RPMs like compared to US and UK?

Slightly below UK, well below US. Australian RPMs typically run 60-75% of US rates, similar to the UK. The advantage Australian creators have is that their audiences often spill into US, UK, and Canadian viewers, who all earn closer to tier-1 RPMs. A channel with 40% Australian and 60% US viewership would earn similar to a pure US channel.

Same niche, other countries

Top cooking & food channels by country.

Same country, other niches

More Australia YouTube niches.