YouTube occupies a unique space in the social media giveaway landscape. Unlike Instagram or TikTok, where promotions center on likes, follows, and short-form content, YouTube giveaways unfold across long-form video, live streams, Community Posts, and Shorts — each with distinct mechanics and compliance considerations. The platform's comment-based entry system, subscriber milestone culture, and Super Chat monetization layer create legal questions that don't exist on any other platform.
The result is a promotion environment where brands routinely violate YouTube's Terms of Service, sweepstakes law, or both — often without realizing it. "Subscribe and comment to win" sounds harmless, but the legal implications of requiring a subscription as an entry condition are anything but straightforward.
This guide covers YouTube's official contest policies, the legal gray areas around subscriber giveaways, comment picker compliance, disclosure requirements, and the specific rules for every YouTube giveaway format — from standard video giveaways to live stream drawings and Shorts contests. For the broader legal framework that applies to all social media promotions, see our social media contest rules hub and our detailed guide on social media contest legal requirements.
YouTube's Contest and Sweepstakes Policy
Google publishes specific Contest Policies and Guidelines that apply to all promotions run on YouTube. These policies exist within YouTube's broader Terms of Service and Community Guidelines, and they apply regardless of channel size, prize value, or promotion format.
YouTube's contest policy requires the following for any giveaway or contest run on the platform:
- Official rules must be accessible. You must provide complete official rules for any promotion. YouTube recommends linking to them in the video description.
- Eligibility requirements must be stated. Age, geographic, and other restrictions must be clearly communicated.
- Applicable laws must be followed. YouTube's policy explicitly states that promotions must comply with all applicable federal, state, and local laws — including sweepstakes registration, bonding, and disclosure requirements.
- YouTube release language is required. Your rules must include a statement that the promotion is not sponsored, endorsed, or administered by YouTube/Google, and that participants release YouTube/Google from any liability.
- Content must comply with Community Guidelines. Promotion content cannot violate YouTube's existing policies on spam, misleading metadata, or artificial engagement.
Critically, YouTube's policy also states that you cannot use YouTube features in ways that artificially inflate metrics. This has direct implications for giveaways that require subscribing, liking, or commenting as entry conditions — actions that YouTube may classify as artificial engagement manipulation depending on context. For the full legal framework underlying all social media promotions, see how to run a sweepstakes legally.
YouTube also reserves the right to remove content or terminate accounts that violate these policies. Unlike a legal dispute — which takes months or years to resolve — YouTube can take immediate platform action against promotions it deems non-compliant. This makes understanding and following the rules a practical necessity, not just a legal one.
YouTube's policy is shorter than you think — and that's the problem
Unlike Instagram or Facebook, which publish detailed promotion guidelines, YouTube's contest policy is relatively brief. This means many specific scenarios — like whether requiring a subscription constitutes consideration, or how to handle Super Chat entries — are not explicitly addressed. When the policy is silent, default to sweepstakes law. The absence of a specific prohibition does not mean an action is compliant.
Subscriber Giveaways: The Legal Gray Area
The most common YouTube giveaway format — "subscribe to my channel to enter" — sits in a legal gray area that most creators and brands ignore entirely. The question is whether requiring a YouTube subscription constitutes consideration, which would make the promotion an illegal lottery rather than a lawful sweepstakes.
The Consideration Argument
Under sweepstakes law, a promotion becomes an illegal lottery if it contains three elements: prize, chance, and consideration. Consideration means the participant gives up something of value to enter. Subscribing to a YouTube channel arguably provides value to the promoter — it increases their subscriber count, improves their algorithmic standing, and delivers an ongoing audience relationship. Some legal scholars argue this constitutes consideration.
The counterargument is that subscribing is free, takes minimal effort, and can be reversed at any time. Courts have not definitively ruled on whether a social media follow or subscription constitutes consideration in the sweepstakes context. But the risk is real, and the consequences of getting it wrong — having your promotion classified as an illegal lottery — are severe. For a detailed explanation of these three elements, see sweepstakes vs contest vs lottery.
The practical reality is that state attorneys general have broad discretion in how they interpret consideration. A state AG looking to make an example of a non-compliant promotion could argue that a subscription requirement — especially when the channel monetizes through ads — creates measurable economic benefit for the promoter. This benefit, however small per subscriber, constitutes value exchanged for the chance to win a prize.
Best Practice: Always Provide an AMOE
Regardless of where the legal line falls, the safest approach is to never require a subscription as the sole entry method. Always provide a free alternative method of entry (AMOE) that does not require subscribing, liking, or commenting. This eliminates the consideration argument entirely.
Practical AMOE options for YouTube giveaways include:
- A form on your website where anyone can enter without subscribing
- An email entry option listed in the video description
- A mail-in entry method (required in some states)
The AMOE must provide an equal chance of winning as the primary entry method. If commenting gives one entry, the AMOE form must also give one entry. If subscribers get "bonus" entries, the AMOE entrants must receive the same number of entries. Any structure where the free entry method provides a materially lower chance of winning defeats the purpose of the AMOE and may not satisfy no purchase necessary law requirements.
"Must be subscribed to win" is the riskiest language in YouTube giveaways
Many creators announce that winners must be subscribed at the time of drawing to be eligible. This effectively makes subscription a required entry condition — even if you also accept other entries. If subscription is a condition of winning, it functions as consideration. Safer language: 'Subscribing is not required to enter or win. Subscribe for bonus content, but all entries have an equal chance regardless of subscription status.'
Comment Picker Giveaways
Comment-based giveaways are the most popular format on YouTube: post a video, ask viewers to leave a comment, then randomly select a winner from the comment section. The format is simple, but the compliance requirements around how you select the winner and how you document the process are frequently overlooked.
How Comment Picker Tools Work
Third-party comment picker tools (like YouTube Random Comment Picker, TubeBuddy's giveaway feature, or Gleam) pull comments from the YouTube Data API, compile them into a list, and select one or more at random. The quality and legal defensibility of this process varies significantly by tool.
The underlying process typically works in three stages: first, the tool authenticates with the YouTube Data API and retrieves comments from the specified video. Second, it processes the comments — removing duplicates, filtering spam, and building the entry pool. Third, it selects one or more winners using a randomization algorithm. The quality of each stage determines whether the selection is legally defensible.
Documentation Requirements
For any sweepstakes — including YouTube comment giveaways — you need to document the selection process well enough to defend it if challenged. This means:
- Total entry count: How many eligible comments were in the pool at the time of drawing?
- Selection method: What tool was used? What randomization algorithm does it employ?
- Timestamp: When was the drawing conducted? Was it after the stated entry deadline?
- Duplicate handling: Were duplicate comments from the same user removed? How?
- Bot filtering: Were spam or bot comments excluded? What criteria were used?
- Screen recording or screenshot: Visual evidence of the selection process
Most free comment picker tools do not provide this level of documentation. That's a problem when prizes are valuable or your audience is large enough that someone might challenge the result. For a comprehensive breakdown of selection methods, see how to pick a random winner.
| Comment Picker Feature | Free Tools (YouTube Random Picker, etc.) | Dedicated Platforms (Revup, Gleam, etc.) |
|---|---|---|
| API-based comment retrieval | Yes — but may miss comments due to API pagination limits | Yes — with full pagination and retry logic |
| Duplicate comment filtering | Basic — same username only | Advanced — multi-signal deduplication |
| Bot and spam filtering | Minimal or none | Automated filtering with manual review option |
| Randomization method | JavaScript Math.random() — pseudo-random | Certified RNG or cryptographic randomization |
| Audit trail | Screenshot only | Full timestamped log with entry pool snapshot |
| Eligibility verification | None — manual process | Integrated verification workflows |
| Legal defensibility | Low | High |
YouTube's API does not guarantee all comments are returned
YouTube's Data API uses pagination and may not return every comment on a video — particularly on videos with thousands of comments. If your comment picker tool relies on a single API call, it may be working from an incomplete list. This means some legitimate entries could be excluded from the drawing entirely. Use tools that handle API pagination properly, or export and verify the full comment list before conducting the drawing.
What YouTube Allows vs. Prohibits in Giveaways
YouTube's policies create a framework that permits promotions but restricts specific mechanics. Understanding the boundaries prevents content removal, channel strikes, or promotion invalidation.
| Action | YouTube Policy | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Asking viewers to comment to enter | Allowed | Must not instruct spam-like behavior; official rules required |
| Asking viewers to subscribe to enter | Gray area | Not explicitly prohibited, but may violate artificial engagement rules; AMOE strongly recommended |
| Asking viewers to like the video to enter | Allowed with caution | Similar consideration concerns as subscription; include AMOE |
| Requiring a purchase to enter | Must include AMOE | No purchase necessary law applies; free entry must be available |
| Using misleading titles/thumbnails about giveaways | Prohibited | Clickbait giveaway titles violate misleading metadata policy |
| Running giveaways solely to inflate metrics | Prohibited | Artificial engagement manipulation; can result in channel strike |
| Hosting official rules in video description | Allowed and recommended | Link to full rules; summary in description is acceptable |
| Selecting winners from Super Chat contributors | Problematic | Super Chats are paid — selecting winners from payers creates lottery concerns |
| Cross-platform entry (YouTube + website) | Allowed | Recommended approach for compliance — off-platform entry serves as AMOE |
| Age-restricted giveaways | Allowed with restrictions | Must comply with YouTube's age-gating and COPPA requirements |
YouTube Giveaway Formats
YouTube supports more giveaway formats than any other social platform, thanks to its mix of long-form video, Shorts, Community Posts, and live streaming. Each format has distinct mechanics and compliance considerations.
Standard Video Comment Giveaways
The classic format: publish a video announcing the giveaway, ask viewers to comment to enter, then select a winner from the comments in a follow-up video or Community Post. This is the most common YouTube giveaway type and the easiest to structure compliantly.
Key compliance points: Link official rules in the description, state entry deadline clearly, provide AMOE, and use a documented random selection method. Announce the winner publicly and provide proof of the drawing.
Subscriber Milestone Giveaways
Creators often celebrate subscriber milestones (100K, 500K, 1M) with giveaways. These are typically structured as "thank you" giveaways where existing subscribers are entered. The legal concern is the same as any subscriber-required giveaway: if only subscribers can enter, subscription functions as consideration.
Compliant approach: Frame the giveaway as open to everyone, not just subscribers. "We're celebrating 100K subscribers by running a giveaway — everyone can enter" is safer than "giving back to our subscribers — must be subbed to win."
Community Post Giveaways
YouTube's Community tab allows text, image, and poll posts that appear in subscribers' feeds. Some creators use Community Posts for quick giveaways — "comment on this post to enter." The same rules apply as video-based giveaways: official rules, AMOE, documented selection. The advantage is lower production effort; the disadvantage is lower reach compared to video content. Note: Community Posts are only available to channels with 500 or more subscribers, so this format is not an option for newer or smaller channels.
YouTube Shorts Contests
Shorts giveaways ask viewers to create their own Short using a branded hashtag, sound, or theme. This format functions more like a contest (skill-based) than a sweepstakes (chance-based) if you're judging entries on creativity or quality. If you're selecting winners randomly from participants, it's a sweepstakes. The classification determines your legal obligations — see sweepstakes vs contest vs lottery for the full breakdown.
Live Stream Giveaways
Real-time giveaways during live broadcasts are increasingly popular. Winners are selected during the stream itself, typically from live chat participants. This format has unique compliance challenges covered in detail below.
Super Chat Giveaways
This is the highest-risk YouTube giveaway format. Some creators select giveaway winners from viewers who send Super Chats (paid messages during live streams). Because Super Chats cost money, selecting winners from Super Chat senders creates a promotion where participants pay to enter — which is the textbook definition of an illegal lottery. Avoid this format entirely, or ensure that Super Chat senders receive no preferential treatment in winner selection.
Super Chat giveaways are likely illegal lotteries
If you select a giveaway winner exclusively from viewers who send Super Chats, you have all three elements of an illegal lottery: prize (the giveaway item), chance (random selection), and consideration (the Super Chat payment). Even if you frame it as 'thanking' Super Chat supporters, the structure is a paid-entry drawing. Either open the giveaway to all viewers (including non-paying ones) or don't select winners from Super Chat contributors.
YouTube Shorts Contests: A Deeper Look
YouTube Shorts has emerged as a direct competitor to TikTok and Instagram Reels, and brands are increasingly using Shorts for contest-style promotions. The mechanics differ from standard YouTube giveaways in important ways.
How Shorts Contests Work
The typical structure: a brand publishes a Shorts video announcing a contest, asks viewers to create their own Short using a specific hashtag (e.g., #BrandNameChallenge), and selects winners based on creativity, engagement, or random drawing. This mirrors TikTok's hashtag challenge format but operates within YouTube's ecosystem and policies.
Shorts vs. TikTok Contests
While the format is similar, the compliance landscape differs. YouTube Shorts contests operate under Google's promotion policies rather than TikTok's Branded Content Policy. Key differences:
- Disclosure format: YouTube requires disclosures in the video description; TikTok uses a branded content toggle on the video itself
- Content ownership: YouTube's Terms of Service grant YouTube a broad license to uploaded content; your rules should address content rights separately from YouTube's license
- Age demographics: YouTube's audience skews slightly older than TikTok's, which may affect your eligibility requirements and COPPA considerations
- Discoverability: Shorts rely on YouTube's recommendation algorithm rather than a dedicated "For You Page" — contest hashtags may be less discoverable than on TikTok
For a detailed comparison of TikTok's promotion rules, see our guide on TikTok contest rules.
Content Rights in Shorts Contests
When participants create Shorts for your contest, they're uploading content to YouTube — which means YouTube's Terms of Service grant YouTube a license to that content. Your official rules should address content rights separately from YouTube's license. If you want to reuse participant-created Shorts in your own marketing (compilations, ads, social posts), your rules must explicitly grant you that right. Without it, you can only share the content on YouTube itself, where YouTube's license applies.
Include language in your official rules stating that by entering the contest, participants grant the sponsor a non-exclusive, royalty-free license to use, reproduce, and display their submission across all media channels. Be specific about the duration and scope of this license — indefinite and worldwide is standard for contest submissions.
Disclosure and Description Requirements
YouTube giveaways require disclosures at multiple touchpoints — in the video itself, in the description, and in your official rules. Missing any of these creates compliance gaps that can trigger FTC scrutiny or platform enforcement.
Video Description Disclosures
The video description is YouTube's primary text-based disclosure surface. Every giveaway video description must include:
- Link to official rules: A clickable URL leading to the complete official rules document. This should appear near the top of the description, not buried below the fold.
- "No purchase necessary" statement: Required by no purchase necessary law for any sweepstakes.
- Entry deadline: Clear start and end dates/times with timezone.
- Eligibility summary: Age, geographic restrictions, and any other key eligibility criteria.
- YouTube release disclaimer: Statement that the promotion is not sponsored by or associated with YouTube/Google.
- Sponsor identification: Clear identification of the brand or entity sponsoring the promotion.
Verbal Disclosures in the Video
For YouTube giveaways, verbal disclosures within the video content are equally important. Viewers who watch the video may never open the description. Best practice:
- State the giveaway is "no purchase necessary" within the video
- Verbally direct viewers to the description for official rules and free entry
- Mention key eligibility restrictions (age, location) out loud
- If the giveaway involves a brand partnership, include FTC-compliant verbal disclosure ("this video is sponsored by [Brand]")
Pinned Comment with Rules Link
A pinned comment is an effective secondary disclosure point. Pin a comment on the giveaway video that includes: a brief summary of how to enter, the entry deadline, a link to official rules, and the "no purchase necessary" statement. This ensures the disclosure appears in the most visible comment position regardless of sorting.
End Screen and Card CTAs
YouTube's end screen and card features can link to external URLs (for channels in the YouTube Partner Program). Use these to link directly to your official rules page or entry form. This creates an additional touchpoint for disclosure and provides a frictionless path to your AMOE entry method.
Put the rules link in the first two lines of your description
YouTube truncates video descriptions after the first 2-3 lines on most devices. If your rules link appears below the fold, most viewers will never see it. Place 'Official Rules & Free Entry: [URL]' within the first two lines so it's visible without clicking 'Show more.' This is the single highest-impact disclosure improvement most YouTube giveaways can make.
How to Structure a Compliant YouTube Giveaway
Follow this process to ensure your YouTube giveaway satisfies both YouTube's promotion policies and applicable sweepstakes law.
YouTube Giveaway Compliance Workflow
Define the promotion type
Classify your giveaway as a sweepstakes (random winner) or contest (judged on skill). This determines your legal obligations. Most YouTube giveaways are sweepstakes. See <a href='/blog/sweepstakes-vs-contest-vs-lottery/'>sweepstakes vs contest vs lottery</a> for classification guidance.
Draft official rules
Include: sponsor identification, eligibility, entry methods (including <a href='/blog/amoe-alternative-method-of-entry/'>AMOE</a>), entry period, prize description and ARV, winner selection method, notification process, YouTube/Google release language, and all required legal disclosures. Host on a permanent URL. See <a href='/blog/how-to-write-sweepstakes-official-rules/'>how to write sweepstakes official rules</a> for a full template.
Set up entry infrastructure
If using comment-based entry, prepare your comment picker tool and test API access. Set up a web-based AMOE form. If <a href='/blog/sweepstakes-registration-bonding-requirements/'>state registration</a> is required (NY, FL, RI for prizes over thresholds), complete it before launching.
Produce the giveaway video
Include verbal disclosures: no purchase necessary, eligibility, where to find rules, entry deadline. If sponsored, include FTC-compliant disclosure in the first 30 seconds. Avoid misleading thumbnails or titles.
Publish with complete description
Rules link in first two lines. NPN statement. Entry deadline with timezone. Eligibility summary. YouTube release language. Pin a comment with the rules link and entry summary.
Monitor and moderate during entry period
Remove spam and bot comments (document removals). Track entry volume. Respond to eligibility questions. Do not change the rules after launch.
Select and announce winner
Use <a href='/blog/how-to-pick-a-random-winner/'>documented random selection</a>. Verify winner eligibility. Notify via YouTube comment and email (if available). Allow the response window stated in your rules. Announce publicly in a follow-up video or Community Post. Issue 1099-MISC if prize value is $2,000+ (federal, updated by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act effective Jan 1, 2026) or per applicable state thresholds.
Revup automates official rules generation, AMOE setup, winner selection, and tax documentation for YouTube giveaways — so you can focus on creating the content, not managing the compliance.
Live Stream Giveaways: Special Rules
Live stream giveaways add real-time complexity to an already layered compliance environment. Winners are selected during the broadcast, often from live chat participants, and the spontaneous nature of live content makes it easy to skip disclosures or deviate from your official rules.
Real-Time Winner Selection
Selecting a winner live on camera creates engagement and excitement but requires careful planning. Your random selection must still be documented, even if it happens in real-time. Use a screen-visible randomization tool (wheel spinner, random name picker displayed on screen) so the audience can see the selection is random. Record the full stream — this serves as your documentation of the drawing process.
Live Chat Entry Mechanics
If entries come from live chat, establish clear rules before the stream begins:
- Entry keyword: Specify a keyword viewers must type (e.g., "ENTER" or "GIVEAWAY") to distinguish entries from regular chat messages
- Entry window: Define a specific time window during the stream when entries are accepted — don't accept the entire stream's chat as entries
- One entry per person: State that duplicate entries will be removed; only the first qualifying comment counts
- AMOE availability: Verbally announce and display on screen that a free entry method is available via a link in the description
Super Chat Considerations
During live streams, viewers can send Super Chats (paid highlighted messages) and Super Stickers. If your giveaway is running during a stream where Super Chats are enabled, you must ensure that Super Chat contributors do not receive preferential treatment in winner selection. Never select winners exclusively from Super Chat messages. Never give Super Chat senders additional entries. If you want to acknowledge Super Chats separately from the giveaway, make the separation explicit both verbally and in your rules.
Pre-Stream Preparation Checklist
Live giveaways leave no room for last-minute fixes. Before going live, confirm the following: official rules are published and the URL is in your stream description. Your randomization tool is tested and screen-share ready. You have a script or notes for verbal disclosures (NPN, eligibility, rules link, entry window). The AMOE form is live and functioning. You know exactly when during the stream the entry window opens and closes. Your stream recording settings are enabled in YouTube Studio.
Record every live stream giveaway in full
Live streams are your documentation. If you run a giveaway during a live stream and the recording is lost, you have no evidence of how the winner was selected, what disclosures were made, or what the entry conditions were. Enable automatic stream recording in your YouTube settings, and keep the recording archived for at least one year after the promotion ends — longer if your official rules specify an extended challenge period.
YouTube Giveaway Compliance Checklist
Use this checklist before launching any YouTube giveaway. Each item addresses a specific compliance requirement from YouTube's policies, sweepstakes law, or FTC guidelines.
YouTube Giveaway Launch Checklist
- Official rules drafted, hosted at a permanent URL, and linked in video description (first two lines)
- No purchase necessary statement included in rules, video description, and spoken in the video
- YouTube/Google release disclaimer included in official rules
- Free alternative method of entry (AMOE) available — subscription or commenting is NOT the only way to enter
- Entry deadline clearly stated with date, time, and timezone — in description and verbally in the video
- Eligibility requirements (age, geography) stated in rules, description, and video
- Pinned comment includes rules link, entry summary, and NPN statement
- Comment picker tool tested and capable of handling expected entry volume with full API pagination
- Winner selection method described in official rules matches the actual tool you plan to use
- Duplicate and bot comment removal process documented before entries begin
- State registration completed if prize value exceeds thresholds (NY $5,000+, FL $5,000+, RI $500+ retail/in-store only)
- FTC disclosures included if the giveaway involves a brand partnership or sponsored content
- Super Chat contributors receive no preferential treatment in winner selection (if live stream)
- Winner notification process and response deadline defined in official rules
- Tax reporting plan in place: W-9 collection for winners, 1099-MISC issuance for prizes $2,000+ (federal threshold as of 2026)
Common YouTube Giveaway Mistakes
These are the errors we see most frequently in YouTube giveaway promotions. Each one creates a specific legal, platform, or operational risk.
1. No Official Rules Document
The most common and most serious mistake. Announcing a giveaway verbally in a video with no written rules document is not legally compliant. Every sweepstakes requires formal official rules that cover entry conditions, eligibility, prize details, winner selection, and legal disclosures. A video description summary is not a substitute for complete official rules.
2. Requiring Subscription as the Only Entry Method
"You must be subscribed to enter" without providing a free alternative entry method creates the consideration problem described above. Even if courts haven't definitively ruled that subscription equals consideration, the risk is unnecessary when providing an AMOE is simple. Include a web form or email entry option and the issue disappears.
3. Using Unverified Comment Picker Tools
Free comment picker tools that rely on a single API call may miss comments, include duplicate entries, or use weak randomization algorithms. If a winner disputes the result and you can't demonstrate that the selection was fair and complete, you have no defense. Use tools that provide an audit trail, or document the process manually with screen recording.
4. No Entry Deadline
Giveaway videos that say "comment below to enter" without specifying when entries close create an open-ended promotion with no defined drawing date. This violates most states' sweepstakes requirements and creates practical problems — when do you stop accepting entries? How do viewers know if the giveaway is still active? Always specify a close date, time, and timezone in the video, description, and pinned comment.
5. Misleading Thumbnails and Titles
Titles like "GIVING AWAY A PS5" on a video that's primarily about something else, with the giveaway being a minor element, can violate YouTube's misleading metadata policy. YouTube has specifically cracked down on clickbait giveaway titles. The giveaway should be a genuine component of the video, not bait for clicks.
6. Forgetting Verbal Disclosures
Many creators put disclosures in the video description but never mention them in the video itself. Since most YouTube viewers never read descriptions, the disclosures aren't reaching the audience. Verbal disclosure of key terms — no purchase necessary, entry deadline, where to find rules — should be part of every giveaway video.
7. Selecting Winners from Super Chat Senders
As detailed above, this creates an illegal lottery structure. The payment (Super Chat) constitutes clear consideration, making the promotion a paid-entry drawing. This is one of the few YouTube giveaway mechanics that is unambiguously non-compliant.
8. No Winner Announcement
Running a giveaway and never publicly announcing the winner erodes trust and may violate your official rules (if they promise a public announcement). It also prevents the winner from knowing they've won if your DM notification fails. Always announce winners publicly — in a follow-up video, Community Post, or pinned comment update on the original giveaway video.
9. Ignoring COPPA and Minor Participation
YouTube has a significant audience under 18, and channels directed at children are subject to COPPA (Children's Online Privacy Protection Act) restrictions. If your giveaway is on a channel that attracts minors, or if your prize appeals to children, you need to address minor participation in your official rules. Most sweepstakes require entrants to be 18+ or 13+ with parental consent. If your channel is marked as "made for kids" in YouTube Studio, comment sections are disabled entirely — making comment-based giveaways impossible on those videos.
YouTube Giveaway Ideas That Work
These formats are popular, high-performing, and structurally easy to make compliant. Each one is a proven model used by brands and creators across YouTube.
1. The Product Launch Giveaway
Tie a giveaway to a new product launch video. The giveaway prize is the product itself. Entry is via comment (plus AMOE form on your site). This format generates engagement on your launch video while putting the product directly in front of your audience. The giveaway incentivizes viewers to watch the full video, boosting watch time and algorithmic performance.
Why it works: The prize is inherently relevant to your audience (they're watching a video about the product), which means entrants are high-quality leads rather than generic prize-seekers. The giveaway also serves as social proof — hundreds of people commenting that they want the product validates demand.
2. The Collaboration Giveaway
Partner with another creator or brand for a joint giveaway. Both channels promote the same giveaway, each providing part of the prize package. Entry requires commenting on one or both videos. This format cross-pollinates audiences and typically generates 2-3x the entries of a solo giveaway. Ensure your official rules clearly identify all sponsors and their respective responsibilities.
3. The Shorts Challenge Contest
Ask viewers to create a YouTube Short using a branded hashtag and a specific creative prompt (demonstrate a skill, show a transformation, share a story). Judge entries on creativity rather than random selection — this makes it a contest rather than a sweepstakes, which simplifies some compliance requirements (no AMOE needed for genuine skill-based contests). Feature the best entries in a compilation video for additional exposure.
4. The Community Engagement Giveaway
Use a Community Post to run a lower-production giveaway tied to an engagement prompt: "Tell us your best [topic] tip in the comments — we'll pick a winner on [date]." This format is fast to launch, doesn't require video production, and keeps your Community tab active between uploads. All standard rules and disclosures still apply.
5. The Watch Party Live Stream Giveaway
Host a live stream event — a premiere watch party, Q&A session, or product demo — with a giveaway integrated into the stream. Select winners at specific intervals during the broadcast using a visible randomization tool. This format drives live viewership and creates real-time engagement. Plan your disclosures and entry mechanics before going live.
Need help structuring your YouTube giveaway for compliance? Revup generates official rules, manages entries from multiple sources, and handles winner selection with a full audit trail.
Measuring YouTube Giveaway Performance
YouTube provides robust analytics that let you measure the impact of giveaway campaigns across multiple dimensions. Track these metrics to evaluate ROI and optimize future promotions.
Subscriber Growth
The most direct metric for YouTube giveaways. Track net new subscribers during the giveaway period using YouTube Studio analytics. Compare against your baseline subscriber growth rate to calculate the incremental lift attributable to the giveaway. Note: a spike in subscribers followed by a rapid decline ("sub and unsub" behavior) indicates your giveaway attracted prize-seekers rather than genuine audience members. Monitor the 30-day retention rate of subscribers acquired during the giveaway period.
Video Performance Metrics
- Views: Compare giveaway video views to your channel average. Giveaway videos typically see 2-5x normal view counts.
- Watch time: Total minutes watched matters more than views for algorithmic performance. A giveaway that drives high views but low average watch duration may not help your channel long-term.
- Average view duration: If viewers are clicking in for the giveaway and clicking away before watching the content, your average view duration will drop. Structure the giveaway announcement to appear after substantive content, not in the first 10 seconds.
- Click-through rate (CTR): Impressions-to-clicks ratio on the giveaway video. Higher CTR signals strong audience interest.
Comment Engagement
Track total comments on the giveaway video versus your average. Beyond raw volume, analyze comment quality: are viewers engaging with the content topic, or just posting generic "enter me" comments? High-quality comments indicate the giveaway is reaching your target audience, not just giveaway hunters.
Conversion Metrics
If your giveaway includes a link to your website (via AMOE form or rules page), track:
- Click-through to website: Use UTM parameters on all description links to track YouTube-sourced traffic
- Email capture: If your AMOE form collects email addresses, measure email list growth from the giveaway
- Downstream conversions: Track whether giveaway entrants convert to customers within 30, 60, or 90 days
ROI Calculation
To calculate the true ROI of a YouTube giveaway, total your costs (prize value, production time, paid promotion spend, platform fees) and measure against your defined goals. If your primary goal is subscriber growth, calculate cost per subscriber acquired. If it's email list growth, calculate cost per email captured. If it's brand awareness, measure incremental impressions and earned media value. Most YouTube giveaways should target a cost per subscriber acquired that's lower than your cost per subscriber from paid advertising — otherwise, you'd be better off running ads. For deeper guidance on promotion ROI, see how to measure sweepstakes ROI.
YouTube Giveaways vs. Other Platforms
Understanding how YouTube's giveaway landscape compares to other platforms helps you choose the right channel for your promotion goals — and ensures you're applying the correct platform-specific rules.
| Feature | YouTube | TikTok | X (Twitter) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary entry format | Comment on video | Like + follow + comment | Create content with hashtag | Reply or repost |
| Video requirement | Yes (long-form, Shorts, or live) | Optional (feed post, Reel, Story) | Yes (native video) | No (text-based) |
| Subscriber/follower requirement legality | Gray area — AMOE recommended | Gray area — AMOE recommended | Not typically required | AMOE recommended |
| Live giveaway support | Excellent (live stream + chat) | Instagram Live (limited tools) | TikTok Live (limited) | Twitter Spaces (minimal) |
| Platform release required | Yes — Google/YouTube release | Yes — Instagram release | Yes — TikTok release | Yes — X release |
| Disclosure surface | Video description + verbal | Caption + #ad | Branded Content toggle + caption | Tweet text + #ad |
| Best for | Engaged communities, product launches | Brand awareness, follower growth | UGC and viral content | Quick engagement, announcements |
For platform-specific guides, see our articles on Instagram giveaway rules and TikTok contest rules. For the overarching legal framework, read social media contest legal requirements.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it legal to run a giveaway on YouTube?
Yes, running a giveaway on YouTube is legal as long as you comply with YouTube's contest policies, applicable federal and state sweepstakes laws, and FTC disclosure requirements. You must publish official rules, provide a free alternative method of entry, include required disclosures, and follow YouTube's Community Guidelines. Failure to meet any of these requirements can result in legal liability or platform enforcement. See our complete guide on how to run a social media contest for step-by-step instructions.
Can I require viewers to subscribe to my channel to enter a giveaway?
This is a legal gray area. Requiring a subscription as the sole entry method may constitute consideration under sweepstakes law, potentially making your giveaway an illegal lottery. The safest approach is to always provide a free alternative method of entry that does not require subscribing, and to make clear in your rules that subscription is not required to enter or win.
What is the best YouTube comment picker tool for giveaways?
The best comment picker tool is one that provides full API pagination (retrieving all comments, not just the first batch), duplicate and bot filtering, a certified or cryptographic random selection method, and a timestamped audit trail. Free browser-based pickers often lack these features. Dedicated platforms like Revup provide integrated comment retrieval, randomization, and documentation in a single workflow. See how to pick a random winner for a full comparison of methods.
Do I need official rules for a small YouTube giveaway?
Yes. The legal requirement to have official rules applies regardless of prize value, channel size, or number of entries. A $25 gift card giveaway on a 500-subscriber channel has the same fundamental legal obligations as a $10,000 giveaway on a million-subscriber channel. The scope of additional requirements (state registration, bonding) varies with prize value, but basic official rules are always required.
Can I run a giveaway using YouTube Super Chats?
Selecting winners exclusively from Super Chat contributors is extremely risky and likely constitutes an illegal lottery — Super Chats are paid messages, creating clear consideration. If you want to run a giveaway during a live stream where Super Chats are enabled, the giveaway must be open to all viewers (including those who don't send Super Chats), and Super Chat contributors must not receive additional entries or preferential treatment in winner selection.
How do I disclose a sponsored YouTube giveaway?
A sponsored YouTube giveaway requires disclosure at multiple levels. In the video itself, verbally state the sponsorship within the first 30 seconds. In the video description, clearly identify the sponsor and include "Includes paid promotion" language. Use YouTube's built-in paid promotion checkbox in YouTube Studio (this adds an on-screen disclosure label). In your official rules, identify all sponsors and their respective roles. For influencer-run promotions, the creator must also comply with FTC endorsement guidelines. See the social media contest rules hub for cross-platform disclosure requirements.
Ready to launch a compliant YouTube giveaway? Revup handles official rules, entry management, random winner selection, and tax documentation — everything you need to run promotions that satisfy YouTube's policies and sweepstakes law.
YouTube giveaways remain one of the most effective tools for driving subscriber growth, engagement, and brand awareness on the platform. But the intersection of YouTube's policies, sweepstakes law, and FTC requirements means that compliance cannot be an afterthought. Structure your promotion correctly from the start, document everything, and provide a free entry method — and your YouTube giveaways will be both legally defensible and high-performing.
For the complete framework on running social media promotions, visit our social media contest rules guide. For related platform guides, see Instagram giveaway rules and TikTok contest rules.