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Faceless AI YouTube Channel
Each point below names the source it comes from and what that source actually says.
A channel has to meet YouTube Partner Program thresholds, go through channel review, and keep following monetization policies after it gets in. That matters because a paid automation method can help someone upload videos without proving that the channel will be eligible for ad revenue.
YouTube's July 15, 2025 policy update clarified that repetitive or mass-produced content is covered by the renamed inauthentic-content policy and remains ineligible for monetization. That is not a blanket claim that AI-assisted original work cannot monetize; it is the reason a template-heavy passive-channel pitch needs extra scrutiny.
The FTC's business-opportunity guidance says earnings claims need written substantiation and buyer-outcome information. A revenue screenshot, a polished channel, or a seller's own result does not answer what ordinary buyers earned after paying for the course, tools, media, and time.
Public YouTube RPM estimates by niche can be directionally useful, but they are not a primary-source record of faceless AI channel buyers. They do not answer how often a buyer builds an audience, passes review, keeps monetization, or earns more than the cost of the method.
No clean public success, failure, or buyer-loss rate was found for people who buy faceless AI YouTube channel methods. That is why the result is marked as not known instead of turned into a made-up percentage.
Niche RPM estimates do not equal a faceless AI channel dataset. A specific channel's ad rate depends on audience, topic, location, advertiser demand, policy status, and whether the videos are monetized at all.