Cost Per Click (CPC) Calculator
CPC, CPM, CTR, and CPA from spend and traffic numbers
Calculate CPC, CPM, CTR, CPA, and conversion rate from ad spend, clicks, impressions, and conversions — the standard ad-performance metric set.
What this tool does
The full set of paid-acquisition unit metrics — CPC, CPM, CTR, CPA, and conversion rate — emerges from basic ratios of your ad spend, clicks, impressions, and conversions. Feed in your total ad spend and click count, plus optional impression and conversion data, and the calculator returns all five metrics together. CPC (cost per click) shows what each click cost; CPM (cost per thousand impressions) scales your spend to a standard impression volume; CTR (click-through rate) expresses clicks as a percentage of impressions; conversion rate shows conversions as a percentage of clicks; and CPA (cost per acquisition) divides total spend by conversions. The result is educational and illustrates the mathematical relationships between these figures — useful for comparing ad performance across channels or time periods. Note that the calculator assumes impression and conversion data where provided and does not account for attribution complexity, time delays, or multi-channel effects.
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Formula Used
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Disclaimer
Results are estimates for educational purposes only. They do not constitute financial advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.
Why CPC Alone Is Not Enough
Cost per click is the most-quoted ad metric, but it rarely tells you whether a campaign is profitable. A 5 CPC can be great if those clicks convert at 5% and each conversion is worth 500, and terrible if they convert at 0.5% and each conversion is worth 50. The calculator computes CPC alongside the metrics that actually control profitability: click-through rate (CTR), cost per thousand impressions (CPM), cost per acquisition (CPA), and conversion rate. All five come from the same spend-plus-traffic inputs you already have in Google Ads or Meta Ads Manager.
What Each Metric Actually Measures
CPC = spend / clicks. Direct cost per traffic unit. CPM = (spend / impressions) × 1,000. Cost to reach 1,000 eyeballs. Useful for comparing awareness campaigns. CTR = clicks / impressions. Measures ad-creative effectiveness. A 1% CTR is weak, 2-3% is average, 5%+ is strong. CPA = spend / conversions. The profitability metric. If your product sells for 100 and CPA is 120, you lose money on every sale. Conversion rate = conversions / clicks. Measures landing-page and funnel effectiveness.
Realistic Benchmarks by Channel
Google Search: CPC typically 1-5, CTR 3-5%. Google Display: CPC 0.50-2, CTR 0.5-1%. Facebook/Instagram feed: CPC 0.50-2, CTR 1-2%. LinkedIn: CPC 5-12, CTR 0.4-1%. TikTok: CPC 0.20-1.50, CTR 1-3%. Reddit: CPC 0.50-2, CTR 0.3-1%. These vary enormously by industry — legal and financial services run 5-10x higher CPC than retail or entertainment. Use the benchmarks as first-pass reality checks, not targets.
How to Actually Use These Numbers
Start with CPA versus allowable acquisition cost. If your product margin is 200 and you can pay up to 100 to acquire a customer, your CPA ceiling is 100. If current CPA is 140, the campaign is bleeding money and needs either higher conversion rate or lower CPC. Next check CTR. If CTR is under benchmark, creative is the problem — ad copy and imagery are not resonating. If CTR is fine but conversion rate is low, the landing page or offer is failing. If both are fine but CPA is still too high, the audience targeting is probably wrong.
Worked Example
Google Search campaign. Total spend: 2,500. Impressions: 80,000. Clicks: 2,400. Conversions: 48. CPC = 2,500 / 2,400 = 1.04. CPM = (2,500 / 80,000) × 1,000 = 31.25. CTR = 2,400 / 80,000 = 3%. CPA = 2,500 / 48 = 52.08. Conversion rate = 48 / 2,400 = 2%. Verdict: CTR at 3% is average-to-good, conversion rate at 2% is average for a mid-funnel campaign, and CPA at 52 is sustainable if customer lifetime value exceeds 52 by a comfortable margin (typically 3x, so 156 minimum LTV to justify).
Things This Calculator Does Not Track
Attribution is the hard part. If a user clicks a Google ad, then a Facebook ad a week later, then converts, who gets credit? Most platforms claim the conversion, double-counting across platforms. Multi-touch attribution (Google Analytics 4, Mixpanel, GA4 data-driven) helps, but the numbers here assume single-touch attribution within one platform. Lifetime value (LTV) is also not here — a 52 CPA might be outstanding for a subscription product with 500 LTV, and terrible for a one-time 60 sale.
Spend $2,500 for 2,400 clicks clicks means CPC of 1.04.
Inputs
This example uses typical values for illustration. Adjust the inputs above to match a specific situation and see how the result changes.
Sources & Methodology
Methodology
This calculator computes four standard digital marketing metrics from campaign performance data. Cost Per Click (CPC) divides total ad spend by total clicks received. Click-Through Rate (CTR) divides total clicks by total impressions and expresses the result as a percentage. Cost Per Mille (CPM) scales total spend to the cost per 1,000 impressions. Cost Per Action (CPA) divides total spend by total conversions. The calculator assumes all inputs are from the same campaign period and treats the observed ratios as representative of that period's performance. It does not account for time-based variations, fee structures, platform differences, attribution delays, or changes in campaign conditions. Results are descriptive metrics derived from entered data and are for illustration purposes only.
References
Frequently Asked Questions
What CPC is good?
How do I improve CTR?
What conversion rate is realistic?
Why does CPA differ from CPC × 1/conversion rate?
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