Marketing Metrics

Cost Per Mille

The cost to deliver 1,000 ad impressions to target audience.

Definition

Cost Per Mille (CPM) represents the cost an advertiser pays to deliver 1,000 ad impressions to their target audience. This metric is fundamental for media planning and buying, enabling comparison of advertising costs across different platforms, formats, and audience segments. CPM pricing reflects placement quality, audience targeting precision, and market demand.

Examples

A $50 campaign with 10,000 impressions has a $5 CPM

CPMs vary significantly by placement, audience, and platform

Higher CPMs often indicate more premium or targeted placements

Calculation

How to Calculate

Divide total advertising spend by number of impressions delivered, then multiply by 1000 to get cost per thousand impressions.

Formula

CPM = (Total Ad Spend / Total Impressions) × 1000

Unit of Measurement

$

Operation Type

composite

Industry Benchmarks for Cost Per Mille

Typical performance ranges by industry segment. Benchmarks vary by platform, audience maturity, and attribution window — treat these as starting points, not targets.

SegmentTypical RangeMedianNotes
LinkedIn (B2B, US)$30 – $50$41.24Premium professional inventory and tight job-title targeting drive the highest CPMs in paid social.
Facebook — Beauty & Health$10 – $14$12.46DTC competition during launch cycles and influencer-adjacent audiences pushes auction prices up.
Facebook — E-commerce / Retail$8 – $12$10.00Heavy seasonal bidding (Q4, Black Friday) keeps CPMs elevated year-round in retail-heavy auctions.
Facebook — Hardware / Automotive$5 – $8$6.96Lower auction density and fewer DTC entrants leave inventory cheaper to reach.
TikTok (cross-industry)$6 – $14$9.16Cheaper than Meta on average, but rising fast — up 16% YoY in 2025 reporting.
Google Display Network$3 – $10$3.12Programmatic display inventory remains the cheapest broad-reach option, with quality tradeoffs.

Sources: TA Monroe / Cometly 2024, Digital Applied / Lebesgue 2024, WordStream 2024, Digital Applied 2024, Triple Whale 2024, WordStream / Smart Insights 2024

Comparison

Related Metrics

Click-Through Rate (CTR)

Click-Through Rate (CTR) measures the ratio of clicks to impressions for a digital advertisement, email, or other clickable content. It's a fundamental metric for evaluating creative relevance, audience targeting quality, and overall ad effectiveness in driving user engagement. CTR varies significantly by format, placement, and channel, making context crucial for performance evaluation.

Cost Per Action (CPA)

Cost Per Action (CPA) measures the average cost required to generate a specific user action or micro-conversion, such as form submissions, email signups, content downloads, or other engagement events. Unlike Cost Per Acquisition which focuses on customer acquisition, CPA tracks the cost efficiency of driving specific engagement milestones that may occur earlier in the customer journey.

Conversion Rate

Conversion rate measures the percentage of users who complete a defined conversion action relative to the total number who had the opportunity to convert. This metric evaluates the effectiveness of marketing efforts, user experience, and overall funnel efficiency in driving desired outcomes. Conversion actions can range from purchases and form submissions to content downloads and subscription signups.

Ad Frequency

Ad frequency measures the average number of times a unique user is exposed to a specific advertisement during a campaign period. This metric is crucial for managing ad fatigue, optimizing reach vs. repetition, and ensuring effective message delivery without oversaturation. Frequency management varies by campaign objective, creative format, and audience type.

Cost Per Click (CPC)

Cost Per Click (CPC) represents the average cost an advertiser pays for each click on their advertisement. In auction-based platforms, actual CPC is determined through a combination of bid amount, quality score, and competition. This metric is fundamental for measuring traffic acquisition efficiency and comparing costs across channels and campaigns.

Pay-Per-Click (PPC)

Pay-Per-Click is an advertising model and auction system where advertisers bid for ad placement and pay only when users click their ads. The actual cost per click is determined through a complex auction that considers bid amounts, quality scores, expected click-through rates, and landing page experience. This model aligns advertising costs with user engagement rather than just exposure.

Reach

Reach measures the total number of unique users who have been exposed to an advertisement at least once during a campaign period. This metric is fundamental for understanding campaign scale, audience penetration, and the efficiency of media spend in accessing target audiences. Reach can be measured at various levels including campaign, platform, and total brand reach.

Engagement Rate

Engagement rate measures the level of audience interaction with content by calculating the ratio of measurable actions to total content exposure. Actions typically include clicks, likes, comments, shares, saves, reactions, and other platform-specific interactions. This metric helps evaluate content resonance, creative effectiveness, and audience relevance while accounting for reach or impression volume.

Video Completion Rate (VCR)

Video Completion Rate measures the percentage of video ad impressions that are watched to 100% completion. This metric helps evaluate creative engagement, message delivery effectiveness, and audience targeting accuracy while accounting for video length and placement quality. VCR is particularly important for brand messaging where full creative viewing is crucial.

Cost Per View (CPV)

Cost Per View measures the average cost of a qualified video view, with platform-specific definitions of what constitutes a billable view. Common view criteria include watching 2-30 seconds, 50% of video in view for 2 continuous seconds, or user-initiated plays. This metric helps evaluate video ad spending efficiency and compare performance across platforms, formats, and campaigns.

View Through Rate (VTR)

View Through Rate measures the percentage of users who see an ad and later convert within a defined attribution window without clicking the ad. This metric helps assess brand awareness impact, consideration influence, and overall advertising effectiveness beyond direct response, particularly for upper-funnel campaigns.

Cost Per Completed View (CPCV)

Cost Per Completed View measures the average cost when a user watches a video ad to 100% completion. This metric is particularly relevant for brand campaigns and storytelling content where full message delivery is crucial for campaign effectiveness. CPCV helps evaluate the cost efficiency of achieving complete message exposure.

Thumbstop Rate

Thumbstop Rate measures the effectiveness of creative in capturing attention by tracking the percentage of users who stop scrolling to engage with the content in their feed for a meaningful duration, typically 2-6 seconds depending on the platform.

Hold Rate

Hold Rate measures how well a video ad retains the viewers it has already hooked — the share of 3-second video views that go on to reach 15 seconds (or completion for shorter videos). Where Hook Rate (Thumbstop Rate) judges the open, Hold Rate judges the middle: it isolates whether the body of the ad earns continued attention after the scroll-stopping first frames, normalized to the audience that actually started watching rather than to total impressions.

First-Time Impression Ratio

First-Time Impression Ratio measures the proportion of ad impressions that represent the first time a unique user has been exposed to an ad. This metric helps evaluate audience reach efficiency and frequency management by distinguishing between new audience exposure and repeat impressions.

Impressions

Impressions measure the total number of times an advertisement is shown to users, regardless of whether they interact with it. Each time an ad appears on a screen counts as one impression, though viewability standards may require minimum exposure duration or percentage in view to count as a valid impression.

Share of Voice (SOV)

Share of Voice quantifies a brand's presence and visibility in the market compared to competitors or total market activity. It measures relative market presence across paid advertising impressions, organic social media engagement, PR mentions, and other trackable communications channels. SOV helps evaluate competitive position and communication effectiveness.

Churn Rate (CR)

Churn rate measures the proportion of customers who discontinue their relationship with a company during a specific timeframe. For subscription businesses, this means cancellations or non-renewals. For non-subscription businesses, churn is often defined as no purchase activity within a set period. It's a critical metric for evaluating customer retention and business health.

Customer Retention Rate (CRR)

Customer Retention Rate measures the proportion of customers who remain active with a company during a specific timeframe. For subscription businesses, this means continued subscriptions. For non-subscription businesses, retention is often defined as repeat purchase activity within a set period. It's a key metric for evaluating customer loyalty, satisfaction, and the effectiveness of retention strategies.

Moving Average

A moving average is a statistical calculation that creates a series of averages from different subsets of data over time. It helps identify trends by smoothing out short-term fluctuations and random outliers in metrics like CPC, CTR, or ROAS.

Statistical Significance

Statistical significance indicates whether an observed difference between variants in an experiment is likely to be due to random chance or represents a genuine effect. In advertising, it helps determine if differences in key metrics like CTR, conversion rate, or ROAS between ad variants or campaigns represent real performance differences rather than random fluctuations. This is crucial for making data-driven optimization decisions and avoiding false conclusions based on temporary variations.

Sample Size

Sample size refers to the number of observations or data points collected in a sample, and is a crucial factor in determining the precision of statistical estimates. In advertising, it directly impacts the confidence, reliability, and validity of metrics such as conversion rates, click-through rates, and return on ad spend (ROAS). The larger the sample size, the more reliable the results, as smaller samples can lead to more variability and less confidence in the conclusions drawn from the data.

Population Mean

The population mean is the average value of a variable calculated using all members of a population, rather than just a sample. In digital advertising, it represents the true average value of metrics like conversion rate, CTR, or CPC across the entire audience or campaign. Unlike sample means which contain sampling error, the population mean is the actual parameter being estimated in statistical analysis, though it's often impossible to measure directly due to resource constraints.

How AdSights helps you track Cost Per Mille

CPM rises when creative engagement falls — platforms charge more per impression for ads that earn fewer reactions, video views, and clicks. AdSights monitors creative-element performance over time, flagging when specific hooks, formats, or visual treatments start losing engagement so teams can retire fatigued variants before CPM inflation eats the budget. By mapping every variant's components to delivered CPM, AdSights also shows which production styles consistently earn cheaper impressions in a given audience — informing not just which ads to scale, but which patterns to brief into the next creative round to keep media costs in check.

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Supplemental Resources

  • 📚
    CPM Calculator

    Calculate and analyze your CPM metrics, including CTR, CPC, CVR and more

    AdSights Tool

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about Cost Per Mille, answered.

What is a good CPM?
Heavily channel-dependent. On Facebook, $8–$15 is the typical range across industries, with $10 a reasonable median. TikTok averages around $9. LinkedIn runs $30–$50 because you're paying for professional targeting precision. Display can land under $5. Rather than chase a low CPM in isolation, evaluate it against CTR and conversion rate — a $20 CPM that delivers a 3% CTR and converts well is cheaper effective traffic than an $8 CPM with a 0.5% CTR.
Why is my CPM so high?
Five common causes: (1) Narrow audience — small custom audiences and tight job-title stacks force the auction to compete harder for limited inventory. (2) Conversion-optimized objectives — bidding for purchases or leads costs more per impression than reach campaigns. (3) Seasonality — Q4 retail, tax season finance, back-to-school education all see CPM spikes. (4) Creative fatigue — when CTR drops, platforms charge more per impression to compensate. (5) Competitor pressure — a new entrant with deep pockets in your auction raises everyone's CPM.
How is CPM different from CPC?
CPM is what you pay per 1,000 impressions; CPC is what you pay per click. They're directly linked by CTR — effective CPC equals CPM divided by CTR, then divided by 10. A $12 CPM and a 2% CTR produces a $0.60 CPC; the same $12 CPM with a 1% CTR doubles your CPC to $1.20. Most modern auction platforms charge on impressions under the hood regardless of which objective you select, which is why creative quality (and the CTR it produces) is the most reliable lever for lowering effective cost.
How do I calculate CPM?
CPM = (total spend ÷ total impressions) × 1,000. If you spent $500 and served 100,000 impressions, your CPM is $5. The 'M' in CPM is the Roman numeral for thousand, not 'million' — a common point of confusion. Most ad platforms display CPM automatically. When comparing across platforms, make sure you're comparing the same audience size and objective — a $15 CPM on a narrow retargeting audience isn't comparable to a $15 CPM on a broad prospecting audience.
How do I lower CPM on Facebook?
The highest-leverage moves: (1) Broaden the audience — Advantage+ and broad targeting almost always carry lower CPMs than narrow saved audiences. (2) Refresh creative regularly — fatigued ads see CPMs creep up because Meta charges more to keep serving low-relevance impressions. (3) Test the reach objective for top-of-funnel campaigns where you don't need conversion optimization. (4) Avoid over-restrictive placements; opening Advantage+ placements (Reels, Audience Network) usually lowers blended CPM. (5) Improve thumbstop and CTR — Meta rewards engagement-positive ads with cheaper inventory.

Related Terms

Cost Per Click (CPC)

Related term

metrics, similar

Click-Through Rate (CTR)

Related term

metrics, component

Impressions

Related term

metrics, component

Cost Per Action

Related term

metrics, component

Reach

Related term

metrics, component

Ad Frequency

Related term

metrics, component