CPM Calculator

Calculate the cost per thousand impressions from ad spend and impressions. This page also keeps the formula, examples, FAQs, and references close by so you can check the result with confidence.

What This CPM Calculator Helps You Do

If you spend $1,000 and get 50,000 impressions, your CPM is $20. Review the formula and examples below if you want to see how the result is derived.

This page is meant to give you a fast answer, but it also helps you double-check the math before you make a decision. Start with the inputs that you already know, run the calculation, and then compare the output with the formula, examples, and FAQs below so you can see whether the answer fits the situation you are modeling.

If the result looks off, the usual causes are a unit mismatch, a missing decimal, the wrong scenario, or a value that needs to be entered as a rate instead of a total. The notes on this page are designed to make those checks easy without forcing you to leave the calculator and search for context elsewhere.

  • Use the calculator first for a quick estimate.
  • Use the formula to understand how the result is built.
  • Use the examples to compare common use cases.
  • Use the references when the answer depends on a standard or assumption.

Common Checks

A quick result is useful, but the best result is one that still makes sense when you look at it a second time. If you are comparing scenarios, try changing one input at a time so you can see which variable has the biggest impact on the final answer. That makes it much easier to spot whether the calculation matches your expectations.

It also helps to keep the context of the problem in mind. A calculator can tell you the math, but you still need to decide whether the input represents a total, a rate, an average, or a category-specific assumption. When in doubt, start with a simple example from the page and scale up from there.

  • Check that every unit matches the rest of the problem.
  • Keep rates, totals, and averages separate.
  • Adjust one variable at a time when testing scenarios.
  • Use the smallest realistic input first, then scale upward.

Scenario Planning

This calculator is especially useful when you want a quick answer before you commit time, money, or effort. Try one baseline input set, then change a single number and compare the result so you can see how sensitive the answer is to that variable.

That makes the page useful for more than just arithmetic. It becomes a small decision aid that helps you compare options, test assumptions, and explain the final number with confidence when you need to share it with someone else.

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Result

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Quick Answer: If you spend $1,000 and get 50,000 impressions, your CPM is $20. Review the formula and examples below if you want to see how the result is derived.

How to Calculate CPM Calculator

  1. Enter ad spend: Use your total media spend.
  2. Enter impressions: Use the total number of ad views or impressions.
  3. Read CPM: The result tells you the cost per 1,000 impressions.

CPM Calculator Formula

CPM = ad spend / impressions × 1000
Variable Meaning Unit
Ad spend Campaign cost $
Impressions Number of ad views

Worked Examples

USA - Brand campaign
  • Ad spend: $1,000
  • Impressions: 50,000

Result: $20

The campaign is buying impressions at twenty dollars per thousand.

UK - Bigger buy
  • Ad spend: $3,000
  • Impressions: 120,000

Result: $25

The CPM remains efficient at this scale.

EU - Lower-cost buy
  • Ad spend: $800
  • Impressions: 40,000

Result: $20

The same CPM can appear across different spend levels when the impression mix is similar.

How to Interpret Your Results

Range Meaning Action
Lower CPM Impressions are cheap to buy Check whether audience quality remains acceptable
Typical CPM The impression cost looks normal Compare with your campaign objective
High CPM Impressions are expensive Review targeting and creative

Frequently Asked Questions

CPM stands for cost per mille, meaning cost per 1,000 impressions.

CPM measures impressions, while CPC measures clicks.

Use CPM when your goal is awareness or reach.
Planning note: This is an advertising efficiency estimate and not a complete attribution analysis.

References

Last reviewed: March 2026