Australia Benchmarks · CPM

Average CPM Australia
2026 Benchmarks

Australia is Tier 1 — CPMs are comparable to the UK and slightly below the US. Meta runs A$14–A$22, LinkedIn A$45–A$75, TikTok A$6–A$12. Here's what Australian advertisers pay.

Updated May 2026 · AUD figures · Australia market data
Meta Australia avg
A$14–A$22
Facebook / Instagram
LinkedIn Australia avg
A$45–A$75
B2B professional targeting
TikTok Australia avg
A$6–A$12
Lower than Meta, growing fast
Google Display Australia
A$3–A$7
Low intent; retargeting effective

Australia CPM by Platform — 2026

Australia is a Tier 1 market — CPMs are broadly comparable to the UK and 15–25% below the US on most platforms. All AUD figures assume current exchange rate of approximately AUD 1.55 per USD. Australia has one of the highest mobile penetration rates globally, which affects placement-level CPM distribution.

PlatformUK CPM (GBP)US CPM (USD)UK Q4 SpikeNote
Meta (Facebook/IG) A$14–A$22 ~$9–$14 USD A$28–A$38+ Q4 spike significant; Jan lowest of year
LinkedIn A$45–A$75 ~$29–$48 USD A$55–A$85 Global auction rates; comparable to US/UK
TikTok A$6–A$12 ~$4–$8 USD A$10–A$18 Growing fast; strong 18–34 penetration in Australia
Google Display A$3–A$7 ~$2–$4.5 USD A$4–A$9 Lower than UK due to smaller advertiser pool
YouTube A$6–A$14 ~$4–$9 USD A$10–A$18 High YouTube engagement in Australia
Snapchat A$4–A$9 ~$2.5–$6 USD A$7–A$13 Niche but strong 18–29 audience in metro Australia
LinkedIn Australia: global rates apply

LinkedIn Australia CPMs of A$45–A$75 reflect global auction rates rather than local market conditions — LinkedIn does not discount for smaller markets. Australia’s active B2B tech and professional services sectors mean competitive LinkedIn inventory, particularly for targeting Sydney and Melbourne tech clusters. For B2B businesses with ACV above A$10,000, LinkedIn remains the most efficient channel for decision-maker targeting.

UK CPM by Industry — Meta & LinkedIn 2026

Industry drives CPM variation on UK platforms just as in the US, but at lower absolute levels. Finance, legal, and B2B SaaS consistently sit at the high end due to advertiser competition. Retail and FMCG benefit from broader audiences and lower auction pressure outside Q4.

IndustryMeta UK (GBP)LinkedIn UK (GBP)TikTok UK (GBP)Note
Ecommerce / Retail £5–£10 £20–£28 £3–£6 High Q4 pressure; TikTok strong for DTC brands
Finance & Insurance £12–£18 £28–£40 £5–£9 FCA compliance reduces creative options; high competition
B2B / SaaS £9–£15 £25–£38 £4–£8 LinkedIn dominant channel; Meta used for awareness
Healthcare £11–£17 £22–£32 £4–£7 MHRA/ASA restrictions limit targeting; higher CPM result
Travel & Hospitality £7–£13 £20–£30 £3–£7 Seasonal peaks; summer and holiday periods spike CPMs
Recruitment & HR £8–£13 £25–£40 £4–£7 LinkedIn natural fit; strongest B2B use case in UK market
FMCG / Consumer Goods £6–£11 £18–£25 £3–£6 Volume-driven; TikTok increasingly effective for product discovery

Australia vs. US & UK CPM — Comparison

Australia is a Tier 1 market alongside the US, Canada, UK, and Western Europe. At current AUD/USD rates (~0.64), Australian CPMs sit between UK and US levels on most platforms. Australia’s smaller total population (26M vs UK 67M, US 335M) means fewer impressions available and slightly more efficient CPMs than the US despite comparable GDP per capita.

🇦🇺 Australia (AUD)
MetaA$14–A$22
LinkedInA$45–A$75
TikTokA$6–A$12
Google DisplayA$3–A$7
YouTubeA$6–A$14
🇬🇧 United Kingdom (GBP)
Meta£8–£16
LinkedIn£20–£35
TikTok£4–£8
Google Display£2–£5
YouTube£4–£9
🇺🇸 United States (USD)
Meta$10–$23
LinkedIn$30–$50
TikTok$6–$12
Google Display$3–$8
YouTube$5–$12

Australia’s digital ad market is the 7th largest globally. With a high social media penetration rate (81%+ on Facebook) and one of the highest per-capita digital ad spend rates, Australia attracts strong advertiser competition — which keeps CPMs in Tier 1 territory despite the smaller absolute market size.

Currency note

All Australian figures on this page are in AUD at approximately 1.55 AUD per USD. When comparing with US benchmark data, divide AUD figures by 1.55 to get USD equivalents. Most Australian advertisers bill in AUD through local Meta and Google accounts — platform-reported CPMs will appear in AUD, which can look high compared to global benchmarks reported in USD.

What Makes Australia CPMs Different

ACCC and ASIC regulatory environment

Australia’s advertising regulatory framework is managed by the ACCC (consumer protection), ASIC (financial products), and TGA (therapeutic goods). Finance, healthcare, and supplements advertisers face targeting and creative restrictions that reduce effective inventory — similar to FCA restrictions in the UK. The Australian Privacy Act 1988 and its 2024 amendments also impose data handling requirements that affect audience targeting precision, particularly for retargeting and lookalike audiences.

IAB Australia market growth

Australia’s digital ad market reached approximately A$14 billion in 2025, with social and search each claiming around 30–35% of total spend. Continued growth in 2026 means more advertiser competition for the same inventory, particularly on Meta and Google. Budget planning for Australia should account for 5–8% CPM inflation versus 2025 levels, consistent with broader Tier 1 market trends.

Seasonal patterns — Australia-specific

Australia’s seasonal calendar is the reverse of the Northern Hemisphere. The major retail CPM peaks are: Christmas/Q4 (November–December, universal peak), EOFY Sales (May–June, a uniquely strong Australian retail event), Easter (March/April), and Back to School (January). The summer break (December–January) sees mixed signals — retail CPMs spike while B2B CPMs fall as decision-makers are on holiday in the Australian summer.

EOFY opportunity

Australia’s End of Financial Year (EOFY) sales period in May–June is a uniquely strong commercial moment with no Northern Hemisphere equivalent. Major retailers, electronics brands, and B2B software companies run EOFY promotions, making it the second-biggest retail CPM peak of the year. For non-retail advertisers, EOFY competitor withdrawal in early July creates a brief CPM dip — a window for efficient awareness campaigns before the July–August B2B season begins.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good CPM for Australian Facebook ads in 2026?

A typical Australia Meta CPM is A$14–A$22 in 2026. Finance and healthcare sit higher at A$18–A$28. Ecommerce typically achieves A$8–A$16. If your Australian Meta CPM consistently exceeds A$30 outside of Q4, audit audience size (aim for 300k+ for a country of 26M), creative relevance score, and campaign objective. Conversion-optimised campaigns command premium CPMs over reach or traffic objectives.

Is LinkedIn worth the CPM for Australian B2B advertising?

For Australian B2B businesses with deal values above A$15,000, yes. LinkedIn Australia CPMs of A$45–A$75 look expensive but deliver verified professional audiences that Meta cannot match. LinkedIn Lead Gen Forms convert at 15–20% versus 4–9% for most landing pages. The Sydney and Melbourne tech, finance, and professional services sectors are well-represented on LinkedIn, making it the strongest B2B channel for high-value Australian enterprise deals.

How does EOFY affect Australian CPMs?

EOFY (End of Financial Year, June 30) creates a secondary CPM peak in May–June as Australian retailers, electronics brands, and B2B software companies run EOFY promotions. CPMs can rise 20–40% during the peak EOFY window (late May – late June). Unlike Christmas Q4, the EOFY peak is unique to Australia and not reflected in global CPM benchmarks — Australian advertisers in non-retail categories can often maintain normal CPMs through EOFY by avoiding the most competitive placement types.

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