CTR Benchmarks by Platform — 2026
Never compare CTR across platforms. A 0.5% CTR on LinkedIn is above average. A 0.5% CTR on Google Search is a problem. Each platform has a different intent level, creative format, and audience state — making cross-platform CTR comparison meaningless.
| Platform | Low CTR | Average CTR | Strong CTR | Excellent CTR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Google Search | <2% | 2–4% | 4–7% | >7% |
| Google Display | <0.2% | 0.2–0.5% | 0.5–1% | >1% |
| Facebook / Instagram | <0.5% | 0.5–1% | 1–2% | >2% |
| <0.3% | 0.3–0.7% | 0.7–1.5% | >1.5% | |
| TikTok | <0.5% | 0.5–1.2% | 1.2–2.5% | >2.5% |
| YouTube (TrueView) | <0.2% | 0.2–0.5% | 0.5–1% | >1% |
Use the CTR calculator to solve for CTR, total clicks, or required impressions from any two known values.
Why High CTR Doesn't Always Mean Good Results
CTR is a pre-click metric. It tells you how compelling your ad is to the audience that saw it — nothing about whether those clicks convert into customers. A high CTR from the wrong audience is expensive and useless.
Broad audiences and low-relevance targeting routinely produce high CTR from clicks that never convert. Clickbait-style creative can spike CTR while tanking conversion rate. Always evaluate CTR alongside CPA — a campaign with 0.5% CTR and 4% CVR outperforms one with 2% CTR and 0.5% CVR on every downstream metric.
CTR improves CPC (on Google)
On Google Ads, CTR directly affects Quality Score, which determines how much you pay per click. A higher CTR signals to Google that your ad is relevant, reducing your CPC for the same position. This creates a virtuous cycle: better ad copy → higher CTR → higher Quality Score → lower CPC → lower CPA. Improving CTR by 1–2 percentage points on Google Search can reduce CPC by 15–30%.
CTR affects CPM (on social)
On Meta and TikTok, high CTR signals relevance to the platform algorithm, which rewards it with lower CPMs through more favorable auction treatment. A creative with 2% CTR will typically achieve lower CPM than one with 0.8% CTR in the same auction, all else equal. This makes CTR optimization on social a two-lever improvement: more clicks per impression AND lower cost per impression.
CTR by Ad Format
Format matters as much as platform. On the same network, video, carousel, and static creative produce systematically different CTR ranges.
| Format | Platform | Typical CTR | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Search text ad | 3–5% | Highest intent; active query match | |
| Shopping / PLA | 0.8–2% | Image-driven; strong for ecommerce | |
| Responsive display | Google Display | 0.1–0.35% | Passive audience; low intent |
| Single image ad | Meta | 0.8–1.5% | Static; higher for strong visual products |
| Video ad (feed) | Meta | 1–2.5% | Higher engagement; CTA timing critical |
| Carousel ad | Meta | 0.7–1.2% | Multiple CTAs; good for product ranges |
| Sponsored content | 0.4–0.7% | B2B standard; copy-heavy | |
| In-Feed video | TikTok | 1–3% | Native format; creative quality drives range |
How to Improve CTR
Ad copy (Search)
The headline is the single biggest CTR lever for Google Search. Include the exact keyword in Headline 1, a specific benefit or number in Headline 2 (not a generic claim), and a clear CTA in Headline 3. Ads that mirror the user's query language consistently outperform generic branded copy by 40–80% CTR. Test RSA asset combinations with at least 3 headline variants per theme and let Google optimize for 2–3 weeks before drawing conclusions.
Creative (Social)
The first frame of a video and the first 3 seconds determine whether a social ad gets any CTR at all. Hook rate — the percentage of people who watch past 3 seconds — is the upstream metric that enables CTR. Static image CTR on Meta is almost entirely driven by visual stopping power and headline clarity. Test one variable at a time: image vs. video, different hooks, different value propositions. Video typically produces 2–3× higher CTR than static on social platforms.
Audience match
An ad shown to the wrong audience will always have low CTR regardless of creative quality. Ensure your targeting precisely matches the need your ad addresses. On Google, negative keywords are often the fastest CTR lever — removing irrelevant queries from broad match campaigns immediately lifts CTR by stopping your ad from showing for low-relevance searches.
For Google Search campaigns running broad or phrase match, pull a Search Terms report and identify the top 20 queries by impression with zero clicks. Add these as negatives. This single action typically improves CTR 20–40% within a week for most campaigns, with no creative changes required.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good CTR for Google Ads?
For Google Search, 3–5% is a solid benchmark for well-optimized campaigns. Top-performing campaigns targeting branded or high-intent exact match terms can exceed 10–15%. For Google Display, 0.35–1% is strong. If your Search CTR is consistently below 2%, review ad copy relevance, keyword match types, and whether your headlines address the user's specific query. The CTR calculator can help you model the click volume impact of different CTR scenarios.
What is a good CTR for email marketing?
Email CTR (clicks ÷ delivered emails) averages 2–3% for ecommerce and 1–2% for B2B. Click-to-open rate (clicks ÷ opens) is a more useful metric — it removes deliverability from the equation. Strong click-to-open rates are 15–25% for ecommerce and 10–20% for B2B. Low CTR in email is almost always a subject line or offer relevance problem, not a copy problem — if people aren't opening, no CTR is possible.
Does CTR affect ad Quality Score?
Yes — CTR is the most heavily weighted factor in Google Ads Quality Score. Expected CTR is one of the three components (alongside ad relevance and landing page experience). A high expected CTR directly reduces your CPC for the same ad position. Google estimates expected CTR based on historical CTR of the keyword and ad combination relative to others in the same auction — so even new campaigns get an estimated score based on similar ads.
Why is my Google Display CTR so much lower than Search?
This is expected and not a performance problem. Search reaches people who typed a query — they're actively looking for something and primed to click. Display reaches people browsing unrelated content — they weren't looking for your product when they saw your ad. The baseline behavior is fundamentally different. Evaluate Display against CPA and ROAS targets, not against Search CTR benchmarks. A 0.2% Display CTR that produces $40 CPA is excellent; a 5% Search CTR that produces $200 CPA is not.
Related Tools & Benchmarks
- CTR Calculator — Solve for CTR, clicks, or impressions from any two known values
- CPC Calculator — Model how CTR improvement affects effective cost per click
- What Is a Good CPC? — How CTR feeds into CPC via Quality Score
- What Is a Good CPA? — CTR in context of the full funnel
- What Is a Good CPM? — How CTR and CPM together determine effective CPC