Benchmark · LinkedIn CPC

Average LinkedIn CPC
2026 Benchmarks

LinkedIn averages $5.26 CPC globally — but narrow B2B targeting pushes it to $8–$15. Here's what drives the number, how it breaks down by format and industry, and when it's actually worth paying.

Updated May 2026 · Sources: Demandbase, Metadata.io, WordStream, LinkedIn Marketing Solutions
Global Avg CPC
$5.26
Sponsored Content, all industries
Narrow B2B Targeting
$8–$15
Job title + seniority + company size
Text Ads CPC
$2–$5
Sidebar placement, lowest format
vs Meta CPC
3–5×
More expensive, far more precise

Quick Answer — LinkedIn CPC at a Glance

LinkedIn CPC in 2026 averages $5.26 globally for Sponsored Content (the main feed ad format). This is 3–5× higher than Meta ($1.50) and 2× higher than Google Search ($2.69) — reflecting the scarcity and precision of LinkedIn's professional targeting data. The platform's unique ability to target by verified job title, seniority, company size, and industry simultaneously justifies the premium for B2B advertisers. For B2C advertisers, it almost never does.

The one-line verdict

If your customer's annual contract value exceeds $10,000 and you can identify them by job title, LinkedIn CPC is almost always worth paying. If your ACV is under $2,000 or your buyers aren't identifiable by professional attributes, LinkedIn CPC will likely produce unprofitable CPAs regardless of targeting quality.

LinkedIn CPC by Ad Format — 2026

Format is the biggest CPC variable within LinkedIn. Each format has different auction dynamics, audience reach, and cost-per-click implications.

Ad FormatAvg CPCCost ModelBest Use CaseNote
Sponsored Content — Single Image $5–$9 CPC or CPM Brand awareness, lead gen, content promotion Most-used format; highest reach; competitive auction
Sponsored Content — Video $6–$10 CPV or CPM Brand storytelling, product demos Higher cost than image; evaluate on cost-per-view not CPC
Sponsored Content — Carousel $4–$8 CPC or CPM Multi-product, case studies, sequential messaging 10–20% cheaper than Single Image; higher engagement rate
Document Ads $3–$7 CPC or CPM Lead gen with content gating, thought leadership Often lowest CPC of native formats; high lead quality
Message Ads (InMail) $0.30–$0.60 per send Cost per send Direct outreach, event invites, demo requests Not true CPC — charged per message delivered
Conversation Ads $0.20–$0.45 per send Cost per send Multi-touch nurturing, interactive messaging Lower cost per send than Message Ads; higher engagement
Dynamic Ads (Spotlight) $6–$12 CPC Personalized CTAs, follower campaigns Personalized with member photo; high CTR offsets CPC
Text Ads $2–$5 CPC or CPM Budget-constrained presence, retargeting Cheapest format; sidebar placement; low CTR
Document Ads: the CPC efficiency winner

Document Ads consistently deliver the lowest CPC among LinkedIn's native content formats — often $3–$7 versus $5–$9 for Single Image. The reason: the document preview (a visible PDF or report) creates a scroll-stopping visual pattern that generates higher CTR than standard image ads, which reduces effective CPC through better auction performance. For lead gen campaigns, Document Ads also capture leads natively, removing the landing page drop-off. If you're not testing Document Ads, it's LinkedIn's highest-ROI format switch.

LinkedIn CPC by Industry — 2026

Industry affects LinkedIn CPC through two mechanisms: the value of the audience being targeted (higher LTV industries bid more aggressively) and the precision of targeting required (enterprise SaaS targeting specific job titles faces a smaller, more competed audience than broad awareness campaigns).

IndustryTypical CPC RangeWhyROI Verdict
Enterprise SaaS (>$50K ACV) $8–$15 Narrow executive targeting; high bidder competition ✓ Excellent — deal size justifies premium CPC
Management Consulting $8–$14 C-suite targeting; premium audience scarcity ✓ Strong — engagement value per click is high
Financial Services (B2B) $7–$13 Corporate finance, investment — high-value buyers ✓ Strong — LTV supports CPC level
HR Tech & Recruiting $5–$10 Platform-native category; HR audience very active ✓ Strong — high audience receptivity
Mid-Market SaaS ($5K–$50K ACV) $5–$10 Moderate targeting precision; competitive segment ⚠ Context-dependent — model CAC carefully
Professional Education $4–$9 Wide professional audience; lower competition ⚠ Works for high-ticket programs; thin for short courses
SMB SaaS (<$5K ACV) $4–$8 Lower-seniority targeting; larger audiences ✗ Usually poor ROI — CPC floor too high for ACV
E-commerce / B2C $4–$8 Wrong platform for consumer intent ✗ Poor ROI — Meta delivers better cost-per-purchase

What Drives LinkedIn CPC — The 4 Key Variables

1. Audience size — the most powerful CPC lever

LinkedIn's CPCs spike sharply when target audience size falls below 50,000 members. With a small audience, the algorithm must compete intensively for limited delivery opportunities — often bidding 2–3× above what the same targeting in a 200,000+ audience would cost. LinkedIn recommends a minimum audience of 50,000 for Sponsored Content and 300,000+ for awareness campaigns. If your LinkedIn CPC is consistently above $10, check your campaign's audience size before adjusting any other variable. Expanding one targeting dimension — adding "Senior Manager" to "Director" — often reduces CPC 20–35% with minimal loss of relevance.

2. Bidding strategy — never use LinkedIn's suggested range

LinkedIn's bid suggestion interface shows a range with a highlighted "recommended" bid. This recommendation is typically 40–60% above the actual auction clearing price. Starting at the bottom of the suggested range and monitoring delivery is the standard approach for CPC efficiency. If delivery is limited, raise bids incrementally (10% at a time) until stable. Maximum Delivery (automated) bidding often produces lower CPCs than manual for campaigns with conversion objectives, because the algorithm optimizes delivery timing rather than competing at the peak of the auction.

3. Ad relevance and CTR feedback loop

LinkedIn uses a relevance signal — similar to Google's Quality Score — that factors in engagement rate (likes, comments, shares) and CTR. Ads with above-average engagement earn better auction treatment over time, which can reduce effective CPC by 15–25% over a 3–4 week campaign. The implication: the first 2 weeks of a LinkedIn campaign typically show higher CPC than the steady state. Don't judge LinkedIn CPC efficiency on the first 7 days — let the algorithm optimize delivery before drawing conclusions.

4. Time of day and day of week

LinkedIn engagement — and advertiser competition — peaks Tuesday through Thursday between 8am and 5pm. Running campaigns 24/7 concentrates spend in these high-competition windows, inflating CPC. Using LinkedIn's ad scheduling feature to limit delivery to Tuesday–Thursday, or conversely to Saturday–Sunday (when competition drops sharply), can reduce CPC 15–25% depending on your audience. For global campaigns, segment by time zone rather than running one global schedule.

LinkedIn Max CPC from Target CPA
Max LinkedIn CPC = Target CPA × Lead-to-Close Rate × Deal Value ÷ ACV
Simplified: if your target CPA is $200 and 5% of LinkedIn leads close at $10,000 ACV, max CPC = $200 × 0.05 = $10. Paying up to $10 CPC is justified. Use the CPC calculator to model spend and click volume at different CPC levels.

LinkedIn CPC vs. Other Platforms — When to Use Each

PlatformAvg CPCTargeting PrecisionBest ForLinkedIn vs
LinkedIn Sponsored Content $5.26 ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Verified professional B2B, enterprise, high-ACV SaaS Baseline
Google Search $2.69 ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Intent-based High-intent buyers ready to evaluate 2× cheaper; lower audience precision
Meta (Facebook/Instagram) $1.50 ⭐⭐⭐ Interest/behavioral B2C, ecommerce, retargeting 3.5× cheaper; no professional targeting
TikTok $0.90 ⭐⭐ Demographic/interest Gen Z, impulse purchase, entertainment 6× cheaper; wrong audience for B2B
Google Display $0.63 ⭐⭐ Contextual/retargeting Retargeting LinkedIn visitors at lower cost 8× cheaper; use to nurture LinkedIn audiences

The two-platform B2B strategy

The highest-ROI approach for B2B advertisers: use LinkedIn at $5–$10 CPC for top-of-funnel awareness to build a qualified audience, then retarget those same LinkedIn-engaged users on Google Display or YouTube at $0.50–$2.00 CPC. You pay LinkedIn's premium only to identify and initially engage qualified prospects — then convert them on cheaper channels. A typical implementation: LinkedIn Sponsored Content for cold outreach → Google Display retargeting to website visitors from LinkedIn → Google Search for conversion. This structure can reduce blended B2B CPC by 30–50% versus running all campaigns on LinkedIn.

Is My LinkedIn CPC Too High? — Diagnostic Checklist

SymptomMost Likely CauseFix
CPC above $12 consistently Audience under 50K, or bidding at suggested range Check audience size; bid at bottom of suggested range
CPC rising week-over-week Audience saturation; same people seeing ad repeatedly Expand audience; rotate creative; add frequency cap
CPC high, impressions very low Audience too small (<20K) for campaign to deliver Broaden targeting; LinkedIn minimum is 50K for Sponsored
CPC at benchmark but no conversions Wrong audience, or offer not compelling for LinkedIn context Test Matched Audiences (customer list); change offer to content
CPC below $3 Running Text Ads or broad targeting — not Sponsored Content Check format; ensure campaign is set up as intended

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average CPC on LinkedIn?

LinkedIn's average CPC for Sponsored Content is $5.26 globally in 2026. Narrow B2B targeting — Director+ job titles at specific company sizes — can push CPC to $8–$15. Document Ads and Carousel Ads typically run 10–30% below Single Image CPC. Text Ads are cheapest at $2–$5 but have the lowest engagement. Message Ads use a cost-per-send model ($0.30–$0.60 per send) rather than CPC. See our CPC by platform comparison for how LinkedIn stacks up against Google, Meta, and TikTok.

Why is LinkedIn CPC so much higher than Meta or Google?

LinkedIn's CPC premium reflects two factors: audience scarcity and targeting precision. LinkedIn has 310M monthly active users versus Meta's 3B+ — a smaller, more concentrated professional audience. More importantly, LinkedIn's targeting data (verified job title, seniority, company, industry) is uniquely precise for B2B. Advertisers targeting "VP of Engineering at Series B-D SaaS companies" have no comparable alternative — and they're willing to pay for it. The premium is a function of supply and demand: high advertiser demand for a small, high-value audience pool.

How can I reduce my LinkedIn CPC?

The fastest levers in order of typical impact: (1) expand audience to 100K+ if currently under 50K, (2) bid at the bottom of LinkedIn's suggested range rather than the recommended midpoint, (3) switch from Single Image to Document Ads — typically 20–40% lower CPC for same audience, (4) enable ad scheduling to avoid peak competition windows (Tuesday–Thursday daytime), (5) use Matched Audiences (customer list upload) for retargeting — these usually produce lower CPC than cold job-title targeting. See the full 7 tactics to reduce LinkedIn CPC guide for detailed implementation.

What is a good CPC for LinkedIn ads?

For Sponsored Content: $5–$8 is a healthy benchmark for most B2B campaigns. Above $12 consistently warrants investigation — usually audience too small or bidding too aggressively. Below $4 on Sponsored Content may indicate broad targeting that's reaching the wrong audience. Always evaluate LinkedIn CPC in context of your target CPA: if your maximum acceptable CPA is $200 and 5% of LinkedIn leads close, your max justified CPC is $10 — regardless of what the benchmark says.

Is LinkedIn CPC worth it for B2B SaaS?

For SaaS with ACV above $10,000: almost always yes. A $10 CPC reaching verified VP-level decision-makers who close at 5% and generate $25,000 ACV produces a $200 CPA — extremely efficient for enterprise B2B. For SMB SaaS with ACV below $3,000: the math is very difficult. At $8 CPC and 2% lead-to-close rate, CPA is $400 — likely above sustainable CAC for a $3,000 ACV product. Use Google Search and Meta for SMB-ACV products; reserve LinkedIn for enterprise-ACV products where the professional targeting premium is justified by deal economics.

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