What is CPC?
Short answer: CPC, or cost per click, is the amount you pay each time someone clicks your ad. CPC = ad spend ÷ clicks. It is the price of attention — but on its own it tells you nothing about whether that attention is profitable.
Key takeaways
- CPC = ad spend ÷ clicks — the price of a single click on your ad.
- A cheap click that never converts is worse than an expensive click that reliably sells.
- CPC is only meaningful next to your break-even CPC — the most you can pay and still profit.
- Lower CPC with better relevance and targeting, but always judge the result by profit, not CPC alone.
CPC is the number every ad platform shows you first, so it is easy to treat it as the scoreboard. It is not. A cheap click that never converts is worse than an expensive click that reliably sells. CPC only becomes meaningful once you compare it to what a click is worth to you.
What drives your CPC
- Competition — more advertisers bidding on a keyword pushes prices up.
- Quality / relevance — platforms reward relevant ads with lower prices.
- Targeting — narrow, high-intent audiences usually cost more per click but convert better.
The number that gives CPC meaning
Your break-even CPC is the most you can pay per click and still profit. Compare your actual CPC to that ceiling and you instantly know whether a campaign is healthy. Use the break-even CPC calculator to find your ceiling in seconds.
FAQ
Is a low CPC always good?
No. A low CPC on traffic that never converts still wastes money.
How do I lower CPC?
Improve ad relevance, tighten targeting, and test creative — but always judge the result against profit, not the CPC alone.