How distributors deliver content and avails to YouTube Movies & TV using Molten Cloud
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Delivering Content to YouTube — Avails, Specs, and Workflow

Platform Delivery Guide

Delivering Content to YouTube Movies & TV

Avails format, technical specifications, metadata requirements, and delivery workflow for the world's largest video platform — covering TVOD, AVOD, and Content ID rights management.

YouTube Movies & TV is the transactional and ad-supported film and television storefront built on the world's largest video platform, reaching over 2.7 billion logged-in users monthly across more than 100 countries. For independent distributors, YouTube offers three distinct revenue streams — transactional purchases and rentals (TVOD), ad-supported free viewing (AVOD), and Content ID passive royalties from user-uploaded clips. Molten Cloud, the rights management and royalties platform for film and television, automates YouTube avails generation, tracks multi-stream royalties across TVOD, AVOD, and Content ID, and ensures every title delivered to YouTube is backed by verified territorial rights data.

YouTube Movies & TV — Platform Snapshot
2.7B+
Monthly Logged-In Users
100+
Countries Available
3
Revenue Streams (TVOD, AVOD, Content ID)
4K
Max Supported Resolution

Key FactsKey Facts: Delivering to YouTube Movies & TV

  • YouTube operates both TVOD and AVOD models for premium content. Through YouTube Movies & TV, distributors can license titles for transactional rental and purchase, free ad-supported viewing, or both simultaneously. Revenue splits vary by model — TVOD typically returns 55% to the content partner, while AVOD revenue is performance-based ad-share. This dual-model flexibility makes YouTube one of the most versatile monetization platforms in digital distribution.
  • Access to YouTube Movies & TV requires an aggregator or direct YouTube partner agreement. Distributors cannot self-upload premium content to the Movies & TV storefront through a standard YouTube channel. Entry is via YouTube's certified aggregator network (distributors such as Filmhub, Quiver, or similar YouTube-approved aggregators) or, for larger catalogs, through a direct YouTube Content Manager (CMS) partnership. Content ID rights management is available through the CMS system.
  • Content ID is a parallel rights layer distinct from the storefront. YouTube's Content ID system scans all user-uploaded videos against a registered rights database. Distributors who register their titles through Content ID earn passive royalties whenever user-uploaded clips match their content — regardless of whether the title is actively sold on the Movies & TV storefront. Managing Content ID claims and revenue alongside TVOD and AVOD royalties requires unified rights tracking.

Content ProfileWhat YouTube Acquires and How Deals Work

YouTube Movies & TV accepts a wide range of content across all genres, with particular strength in action, drama, comedy, documentary, and international film. Understanding the platform's deal structures helps distributors choose the right entry path and revenue model.

YouTube Movies & TV — Content & Deal Profile
AspectDetails
Revenue ModelsTVOD (rental + purchase), AVOD (free with ads), Content ID passive royalties — can be combined
TVOD SplitApproximately 55% to content partner, 45% to YouTube (standard; negotiated rates for large catalogs)
AVOD ModelAd-revenue share based on viewership — variable per-title, per-territory monthly revenue
Content PreferencesAll genres; action, drama, comedy, documentary, international, anime, classic film — volume and quality welcomed
Territories100+ countries — one of the broadest territorial footprints of any streaming platform
ExclusivityNon-exclusive for AVOD; TVOD may have window preferences but full exclusivity rarely required
Access PathCertified aggregator (most common for independent distributors) or direct YouTube CMS partnership

The combination of TVOD, AVOD, and Content ID on a single platform — and across 100+ countries — makes YouTube one of the highest-complexity royalty environments for independent distributors. A single title on YouTube can generate revenue from three different mechanisms, each with its own reporting cycle, currency, and territory breakdown.

Avails FormatYouTube Avails Requirements

YouTube avails are submitted through the YouTube Content Manager (CMS) or via an aggregator's delivery portal. The avails data captures per-title, per-territory availability for each revenue model — TVOD and AVOD windows can differ for the same title.

YouTube Avails — Key Fields
FieldDescriptionNotes
TitleExact title as it should appear on the storefrontMust match metadata, artwork, and CMS records exactly
Content TypeMovie, Series, Season, EpisodeSeries require full season/episode hierarchy in CMS
TerritoryAvailable countries per windowYouTube supports 100+ countries — specify each territory independently
Rights TypeTVOD, AVOD, or bothTVOD and AVOD windows can differ per territory
License Start / EndAvailability window datesOpen-ended windows accepted; TVOD windows typically aligned with theatrical or home-video release strategy
Rental Window48-hour rental period (standard)48-hour rental is YouTube's standard; not configurable per title
Pricing TierSD, HD, or 4K pricing tierYouTube manages retail pricing within tiers — distributors select tier, not exact price
Content RatingMPAA or territory-equivalent ratingRequired per territory — affects visibility and age-gating
Content ID RegistrationFlag for Content ID enrollmentSeparate from storefront avails — requires rights reference file upload

Technical SpecsVideo, Audio, and Caption Requirements

YouTube Movies & TV accepts both production-quality masters (ProRes) and high-quality delivery files (H.264/H.265). For premium storefront placement, YouTube recommends delivering the highest quality source file available — YouTube's transcoding pipeline handles adaptive bitrate outputs for all devices.

YouTube Movies & TV — Technical Specifications
SpecificationRequirement
Video CodecProRes 422 or ProRes 4444 (preferred masters); H.264 or H.265 (delivery files accepted)
ContainerMOV (ProRes) or MP4 (H.264/H.265)
ResolutionUp to 4K (3840 × 2160); 1920 × 1080 HD minimum for storefront
Frame Rate23.976, 24, 25, 29.97, or 30 fps (constant frame rate required)
Video BitrateProRes: variable (codec-managed); H.264: 35–68 Mbps for 1080p; H.265: 20–40 Mbps for 4K
Color SpaceRec. 709 (HD); Rec. 2020 with HDR10 or HLG metadata for 4K HDR
Audio CodecPCM (uncompressed, preferred with ProRes) or AAC
Audio ChannelsStereo (2.0) or 5.1 surround — separate audio tracks recommended for multi-language
Audio BitratePCM: 24-bit / 48 kHz; AAC: 320 kbps minimum
Subtitles / CaptionsSRT or TTML — English SDH required for US; additional language subtitles per territory
ArtworkLandscape 16:9 (2560 × 1440 minimum) + portrait 2:3 (1400 × 2100 minimum); PNG or JPG, no text overlay on landscape
ProRes vs. H.264: Which to Deliver?

YouTube recommends delivering the highest quality master available. ProRes 422 or 4444 in MOV is preferred for storefront titles — YouTube's transcoding pipeline generates all required adaptive outputs (1080p, 4K, HDR) from the master. H.264 in MP4 is accepted for distributors without access to ProRes masters, but delivering compressed H.264 as the source limits the quality ceiling of YouTube's transcoded outputs. For 4K or HDR titles, a ProRes or H.265 master is strongly recommended.

DeliveryHow Content Gets to YouTube Movies & TV

YouTube's delivery workflow differs depending on whether the distributor uses an aggregator or a direct YouTube CMS partnership. Both paths ultimately result in content being ingested into the YouTube Content Manager system.

Partnership Setup
Establish an aggregator relationship (e.g., Filmhub, Quiver, or another YouTube-certified aggregator) or apply for a direct YouTube CMS partnership. Direct partnerships require a minimum catalog size and ongoing content volume commitment.
CMS Account Configuration
The aggregator or YouTube partner team configures the Content Manager (CMS) account with asset reference files for Content ID, channel associations, and territory-specific rights policies.
Avails Submission
Submit per-title avails data with territory, rights type (TVOD/AVOD), window dates, pricing tier, and content ratings. Avails can be submitted via the CMS interface, spreadsheet template, or aggregator portal.
Asset Delivery
Upload video masters (ProRes/MOV or H.264/MP4), audio files, subtitle/caption files (SRT/TTML), metadata XML, and artwork via Google Drive, Aspera, or the aggregator's delivery portal. Content ID reference files are uploaded separately.
QC & Ingestion
YouTube runs automated technical QC and metadata validation. Turnaround for storefront activation is typically 5-15 business days. Content ID matching begins as soon as reference files are processed, which may be faster than storefront activation.
Go Live, Revenue & Content ID
Storefront titles go live on the scheduled availability date. TVOD revenue is reported per-transaction; AVOD revenue on monthly cycles; Content ID claims and revenue reported monthly through the CMS dashboard.

PitfallsCommon Mistakes When Delivering to YouTube Movies & TV

Top 5 Delivery Pitfalls

1. Conflating YouTube channel uploads with Movies & TV storefront delivery. Premium storefront content cannot be self-uploaded through a standard YouTube channel. Distributors who upload via a regular channel lose TVOD monetization and proper CMS rights management. Storefront delivery requires an aggregator or direct CMS partnership.

2. Missing Content ID registration for delivered titles. Delivering a title to the storefront without registering it in Content ID leaves passive royalties from user-uploaded clips uncaptured. Content ID registration should be part of every YouTube delivery — it generates revenue that requires no additional distribution windows or active licensing.

3. Delivering H.264 when ProRes is available. Distributors who deliver H.264 when a ProRes master exists limit the quality of YouTube's transcoded outputs. For 4K, HDR, or premium storefront placement, delivering the highest-quality source is critical — YouTube's transcoding pipeline performs best with uncompressed or lightly compressed masters.

4. Territory rights mismatches in avails. YouTube's 100+ country footprint means territorial rights data must be precise. Submitting avails for territories where TVOD or AVOD rights are not actually held — common when rights vary by deal across a catalog — results in CMS rejection or, worse, live content with rights conflicts that trigger manual takedowns.

5. Unmanaged TVOD, AVOD, and Content ID royalty reconciliation. YouTube generates three distinct revenue streams per title, each with different reporting formats, currencies, and payment cycles. Distributors who reconcile these manually using YouTube's CMS exports and spreadsheets face significant overhead — and often miss Content ID revenue that is credited to channels rather than tracked per-title.

ComparisonManual Delivery vs. Molten Cloud

Manual Process
2-3 days
Per submission cycle (30 titles)
  • Check TVOD and AVOD rights per territory manually
  • Build avails from contracts and spreadsheets
  • Reconcile TVOD, AVOD, and Content ID revenue separately
  • Track license windows and Content ID claims manually
With Molten Cloud
2-3 hours
Per submission cycle (30 titles)
  • TVOD and AVOD availability query: instant, from verified rights data
  • Generate YouTube-formatted avails in one click
  • TVOD, AVOD, and Content ID revenue unified and royalties auto-calculated
  • Automated license expiration alerts and Content ID conflict tracking

AutomationHow Molten Cloud Automates YouTube Delivery

Molten Cloud connects rights data to YouTube's multi-stream delivery and royalty environment:

  • Multi-model avails generation. Molten Cloud queries the rights database for TVOD and AVOD availability per territory — independently. A title with TVOD rights in the US and Canada but AVOD rights across all 100+ YouTube markets generates accurate, model-specific avails for each territory without manual cross-referencing of contracts.
  • Unified TVOD, AVOD, and Content ID royalty tracking. YouTube's three revenue streams produce distinct monthly reports in different formats. Molten Cloud ingests all three, maps revenue to titles and territories, and calculates participant royalties in a single reconciled statement — eliminating the spreadsheet reconciliation that consumes weeks of finance team time each quarter.
  • Content ID claim monitoring. Content ID claims generate revenue but also require monitoring for disputes and conflicts. Molten Cloud tracks active Content ID policies per title, flags disputed claims, and ensures that passive royalty revenue is captured and attributed correctly across all registered territories.
  • Cross-platform rights coordination. YouTube's non-exclusive AVOD model means the same title often runs on Tubi, Pluto TV, Roku Channel, and YouTube simultaneously. Molten Cloud manages avails, delivery, and royalties across all platforms from the same verified rights data — preventing territorial conflicts and ensuring consistent availability across every service.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do distributors deliver content to YouTube Movies & TV?

Distributors deliver content to YouTube Movies & TV through a certified aggregator (such as Filmhub, Quiver, or another YouTube-approved partner) or via a direct YouTube Content Manager (CMS) partnership for larger catalogs. Content cannot be uploaded to the premium storefront through a standard YouTube channel. Delivery involves submitting per-title avails with territory, rights type (TVOD and/or AVOD), and window dates, then uploading video assets (ProRes in MOV or H.264 in MP4, up to 4K), subtitle files (SRT or TTML), metadata, and artwork. Content ID reference files are registered separately to capture passive royalties from user-uploaded clips. Molten Cloud automates avails generation from verified TVOD and AVOD rights data and unifies royalty tracking across all three YouTube revenue streams.

What are YouTube Movies & TV's technical delivery requirements?

YouTube Movies & TV prefers ProRes 422 or ProRes 4444 in MOV containers for master delivery, with H.264 or H.265 in MP4 accepted as an alternative. Resolution goes up to 4K (3840 × 2160), with 1920 × 1080 as the storefront minimum. Frame rate must be constant at 23.976, 24, 25, 29.97, or 30 fps. Audio should be PCM (24-bit/48 kHz) with ProRes masters or AAC at 320 kbps minimum, in stereo or 5.1 surround. Subtitles must be SRT or TTML — English SDH captions are required for US distribution. Artwork requires a landscape 16:9 image (2560 × 1440 minimum) and a portrait 2:3 image (1400 × 2100 minimum). For 4K or HDR titles, delivering a ProRes or H.265 master is strongly recommended over H.264.

What is YouTube Content ID and how does it affect content delivery?

YouTube Content ID is a rights management system that automatically scans all user-uploaded videos against a database of registered reference files. When a match is detected, the rights holder can choose to monetize the matched video (earning ad revenue from it), block it, or track its viewership. Distributors who register their titles in Content ID earn passive royalties from user-uploaded clips — trailers, clips, fan edits, and full uploads — without requiring any additional licensing action. Content ID registration is separate from YouTube Movies & TV storefront delivery but should be part of every YouTube delivery workflow. Molten Cloud tracks Content ID claims, monitors disputed matches, and incorporates Content ID revenue into unified per-title royalty statements alongside TVOD and AVOD earnings.

How does Molten Cloud help with YouTube Movies & TV content delivery?

Molten Cloud automates YouTube delivery through TVOD- and AVOD-specific avails generation (one-click export of titles with confirmed rights per model and territory), unified royalty tracking (automated ingestion of YouTube's TVOD transaction reports, AVOD revenue reports, and Content ID earnings into a single reconciled statement per title), Content ID claim monitoring (tracking active policies, disputed claims, and passive royalty attribution), and license window management (automated alerts before TVOD or AVOD window expirations). Because YouTube's AVOD tier is non-exclusive, Molten Cloud also manages the same content's availability and royalties across Tubi, Pluto TV, Roku Channel, and other AVOD platforms — all from the same verified rights database.

Molten Cloud generates YouTube-ready avails from your rights data and tracks TVOD, AVOD, and Content ID royalties automatically — across YouTube and every platform in your distribution stack.

See how YouTube delivery works in Molten Cloud