Calculate your click-through rate (CTR) based on impressions and clicks.
Total number of times your ad was shown.
Total number of clicks your ad received.
Your CTR
0.00%
What is click-through rate (CTR)?
Click through rate (CTR) measures how often people click after seeing your ad, link, or search result. It’s expressed as a percentage and reflects the relevance and appeal of your creative, offer, and targeting.
How to calculate CTR
CTR uses a straightforward formula: CTR (%) = (Total clicks ÷ Total impressions) × 100 If your ad receives 200 clicks from 10,000 impressions, your CTR is 2%. The CTR calculator automates this so you can quickly compare ads, audiences, and channels.
What is the average CTR?
Benchmarks vary by channel and format, but recent studies show:
Google Ads (Search): Average CTR around 3–7% across industries; several reports place it roughly 3.2–6.6% for search, with display under 1%. (cc: Wordstream)
Google Ads (Display): Average CTR is typically 0.4–0.6%, with some newer data putting global display CTR even lower for generic banners. (cc: AI Digital)
Meta (Facebook + Instagram): Across industries, CTR for traffic campaigns is often around 0.8–1.5%
TikTok Ads: Benchmarks often show CTR around 0.7–1.0%. (cc: Lebesgue)
Snapchat Ads: Link click-through rates are commonly around 0.9–1.5%, varying by industry. (cc: Gupta Media)
X (Twitter) Ads: Average CTR sits around 0.8–1.0% in multi-industry benchmarks. (cc: Hootsuite)
For organic search, page-one rankings have much higher CTR than ads: estimates show position 1 often capturing 30–40%+ CTR, with CTR dropping as you move down the page.
What is a good CTR?
“Good” CTR is relative to placement, intent, and channel:
Organic Search (SEO)
Page-one position 1 can see ~30–40%+ CTR.
Positions 2–3 often land in the 10–20% range.
Lower page-one positions may be in the 2–8% range.
A “good” organic CTR is one that beats typical CTR for your ranking position.
Google Ads (Search)
If the average search CTR is ~3–7%, anything consistently above your industry’s norm (e.g. 8–12% on branded or very tight non-brand) is strong.
Paid Social
Meta Ads (Facebook + Instagram): If platform averages hover around 0.8–1.5%, then 1.5–3%+ is typically “good.”
TikTok / Snapchat / X: Benchmarks ~0.7–1.0%, so breaking 1.2–1.5%+ on cold audiences is strong performance.