1

Moderator On Youtube Jobs (NOW HIRING)

next page

Showing results 1-20

Moderator On Youtube information

See salary details

$13

$30

$53

How much do moderator on youtube jobs pay per hour?

As of Jun 16, 2026, the average hourly pay for moderator on youtube in the United States is $30.93, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $21.15 and $36.30 per hour, depending on experience, location, and employer.

Is YouTube moderator a real job?

Yes, a YouTube moderator is a real job responsible for reviewing and managing content to ensure it complies with platform policies. The role often involves monitoring comments, videos, and live streams, and may require familiarity with content guidelines and moderation tools. It can be a remote position with flexible hours, depending on the employer.

What is the difference between Moderator On Youtube vs Content Moderator?

AspectModerator On YoutubeContent Moderator
Required CredentialsBasic digital literacy, familiarity with platform policiesSimilar: digital literacy, understanding of content policies
Work EnvironmentOnline, remote, platform-specificOnline or in-office, varies by employer
Industry UsagePrimarily social media, video platformsBroad: media, social media, entertainment
Common Search/ComparisonYesYes

Both roles involve monitoring online content to ensure compliance with platform policies. A Moderator On Youtube specifically manages video comments, live chats, and community guidelines on YouTube, while a Content Moderator may work across various platforms and content types. The core skills and environment are similar, but the scope and platform focus differ.

How much do YouTube moderators get paid?

YouTube moderators typically earn between $12 and $20 per hour, depending on experience and location. Some moderators work as freelancers or contractors, which can affect pay rates, and the role often requires familiarity with content policies and moderation tools.

How do I become a YouTube moderator?

To become a YouTube moderator, you typically need to be invited by a channel owner or creator to help manage live chats or comment sections. Strong communication skills, familiarity with YouTube's community guidelines, and the ability to enforce rules consistently are important. Some channels may also require experience with moderation tools or platforms.

Do YouTube moderators get paid?

YouTube moderators, often volunteers or part of the platform's community management teams, typically do not receive direct payment unless they are employed by YouTube or a related company. Paid moderation roles are usually found in larger organizations or as part of content management teams, with compensation varying based on the employer and job responsibilities.
More about Moderator On Youtube jobs
Infographic showing various Moderator On Youtube job openings in the United States as of June 2026, with employment types broken down into 1% As Needed, and 99% Full Time. Highlights an 94% Physical, 1% Hybrid, and 5% Remote job distribution, with an average salary of $64,331 per year, or $30.9 per hour.

Community & Developer Manager, Vyro

MrBeast

New York, NY

Other

Posted 17 days ago


Job description

Community & Developer Manager, Vyro
About Vyro

Vyro is Beast Industries' creator-led marketing platform - the engine that turns independent creators into a distribution channel for the world's biggest brands. Clipping is our first campaign type: creators take long-form content from brand partners (MrBeast, Disney, and more coming) and produce short-form cuts that get distributed across TikTok, Reels, Shorts, and X. Creators get paid on views, brands get native reach, and Vyro sits in the middle.

We've built a large, active creator community on Discord and across platforms, and it's growing fast. Our focus right now is turning that community into the most engaged, most capable group of creators they can be.

The Role

We're hiring a Community Manager to own the relationship with our creator community end-to-end. Not a moderator. Not a copywriter. This is a "human Swiss Army knife" role - you'll be the face of Vyro to our creators, the voice of our creators inside Vyro, and the person who turns a Discord full of clippers into a real community that creators want to belong to.

You'll own the engagement flywheel: get clippers hyped when new brand campaigns drop, train them to be better at what they do, produce content yourself to show them how, and build the trust we need to bring them along as the platform evolves. If you do this well, you become a mini-personality in the creator-economy space - and Vyro becomes the platform creators recommend to their friends. As Vyro scales, this person will also be handed new business functions to test and learn - from activating inbound brand leads to standing up entirely new programs from scratch. This is a role for someone who sees ambiguity as an opportunity, not an obstacle.

What You'll DoCommunity leadership
  • Own the Vyro Discord - drive daily engagement, run channel strategy, and grow active participation across our creator base.
  • Be the human face of the brand for creators. Show up on camera, answer questions, celebrate wins, handle feedback when things go sideways.
  • Host regular webinars, AMAs, and office hours - both educational ("how to clip better") and campaign-specific ("here's what Disney wants for the Moana drop").
  • Build relationships with our top creators and create a path for the next tier to level up.
Content creation
  • Produce educational content - video tutorials, written guides, templates - that teaches clippers how to improve their craft and earn more.
  • Clip source footage yourself - and do it fast, using AI. When a brand drops a long-form asset, you'll use AI editing and clipping tools to turn it around quickly, producing sample cuts the community can learn from. We expect you to be burning through these tools daily, not occasionally.
  • Maintain a personal social presence tied to the role. You'll be posting, reposting, and commenting across TikTok, Instagram, X, and LinkedIn - both amplifying creators and building your own voice.
Campaign activation
  • Rev the community up when new brand campaigns go live. Every campaign launch should feel like an event.
  • Translate brand briefs into creator-friendly language. What does the brand actually want? What's the hook? What are the guardrails?
  • Track which creators engage with which campaigns, and feed insights back to the Vyro product and brand teams.
Brand-side support
  • Be a credible first point of contact for inbound small-to-mid-size brands - fielding inquiries, explaining the platform, and qualifying leads before handing off to the right person. You'll often be the one helping a brand understand what clipping is, what to expect, and how to get the most out of their first campaign.
  • Proactively improve brand-side inbound to pave the way for those that come after you.
Who You Are

We're looking for a specific personality type more than a specific resume. If you tick most of these, we want to talk:

  • You've run a creator-facing community at scale before. Ideal backgrounds: community lead at a creator-economy platform (TikTok Effect House, Instagram/Reels creator programs, Snap Lens, YouTube creator partnerships, Patreon, Twitch, Substack, etc.), or community lead at a tools-for-creators company.
  • You have a personal social media presence and aren't precious about using it. You know the difference between posting to lurkers and posting to a community that will reply.
  • You're bubbly, positive, and charismatic on camera. Webinars don't intimidate you - you've hosted them, or you're excited to start.
  • You can actually do the work - and you use AI to make it faster. You can edit a clip, write a caption that performs, and produce a short tutorial without a production team. More importantly, you're already using AI tools (CapCut AI, Opus Clip, ChatGPT, or whatever's working right now) to multiply your output. If you're not already operating this way, this probably isn't the right fit.
  • You're willing to get stuck into varied and new tasks as they come up. A lot of this role is hand-cranking proofs of concept - building the playbook live, not running someone else's. You see that as the fun part, not the downside.
  • You're comfortable being a generalist. You'll wear community, content, brand, and product-feedback hats in a single week.
  • You're AI-native in how you work - not just curious about it. You've already integrated AI tools into your content and community workflows and you're actively trying new ones. Non-adoption here is a red flag, not a gap we'll train around.
  • Bonus: prior experience with Discord community growth, creator-tool ecosystems, or running ambassador programs.
What This Role Is Not
  • It's not a social media manager job. You're running a community, not a content calendar.
  • It's not a moderator job. Trust & safety is handled separately - you're here to grow and engage, not police.
  • It's not a behind-the-scenes job. You will be visible, on camera, and named.
Why This Role Matters

Clipping is where Vyro is starting, and community is how we make it work. Every campaign we run lives or dies on whether creators actually show up, and that trust is built one relationship at a time. This role owns that.

This is the first community hire at Vyro. You'll set the playbook that every future community hire runs from. If you want a seat at the table while a creator platform is being built from the ground up - inside a company with MrBeast-scale distribution behind it - this is that seat.

The target total compensation ranges from $90,000 to 135,000, an employee equity plan grant, bonus, plus comprehensive benefits.