A YouTube channel is a library plus an audience
Treat the purchase as more than a subscriber count. The buyer is taking on upload history, niche memory, search traffic, suggested-video patterns, comments, copyright claims, and the way viewers expect the channel to behave after the handover.
Read the channel before reading the price
Open the public channel and look for posting cadence, Shorts versus long-form balance, deleted-video gaps, sudden niche pivots, reused clips, and whether recent uploads still earn meaningful engagement from the claimed audience.
YPP status needs current evidence
YouTube Partner Program eligibility currently depends on policy compliance, country availability, active AdSense setup, 2-Step Verification, advanced features, and audience thresholds such as 1,000 subscribers with valid watch hours or Shorts views. Seller-stated monetization is useful only when the channel still supports it.
Brand Account transfer is the control issue
A clean YouTube transfer usually depends on Brand Account roles, owner timing, channel permissions, recovery access, and avoiding the wrong-channel deletion risk YouTube warns about during Brand Account movement.
Escrow belongs between offer and release
Use escrow while the seller completes the agreed channel transfer, the buyer verifies access, and both sides document recovery controls, owner permissions, monetization context, and any revenue or strike disclosures.
When the channel is not worth buying
Walk away from channels built on stolen compilations, sudden viral Shorts with no returning audience, unresolved Content ID problems, seller pressure to use direct payment, or a seller who cannot explain Brand Account ownership.
A practical buying sequence
Shortlist by niche first, inspect public history second, request current proof third, negotiate only after transfer readiness is clear, and close only after the account control path matches the listing.