That’s not how it works.
Podcasts don’t get paid for listens. They get paid for ads, and only under specific conditions. The listen has to be long enough. The episode has to be new enough. The ad has to actually exist.
A million listens on an old episode can generate nothing.
What surprised me digging into this wasn’t the ad model itself, but how much discovery quietly controls income. If an episode isn’t surfaced in the short window advertisers care about, it effectively never monetizes. Chronology matters more than popularity, but most podcast apps don’t make chronology easy to reason about across shows.
From the listener side, everything looks equal. From the creator side, value decays fast and invisibly.
This creates a long tail of shows that feel popular but never really earn, while platforms still benefit from engagement.