Digital CPM Calculator
Calculate CPM, estimate budget, or forecast impressions. Use presets for quick planning and copy a clean summary for stakeholders.
Compute CPM, estimate cost, or forecast impressions. Use presets for quick planning and copy a summary for reporting.
Result
US$ 9,00
CPM
Common pitfalls
Compare CPM only with consistent definitions (served vs viewable) and segment by placement/geo/audience before concluding.
Summary
Copy this block into a brief, doc, or email.
Digital CPM Calculator summary Mode: CPM Cost ($): US$ 6.750,00 Impressions: 750.000 CPM: US$ 9,00 Formula: CPM = (Cost ÷ Impressions) × 1,000 Assumptions: impressions may be served or viewable depending on platform; CPM varies by placement mix, geo, audience, and seasonality.
Formula
CPM = (Cost ÷ Impressions) × 1,000
Get an interpretation of your CPM math with practical next steps. AI does not change the calculations.
Avoid sharing sensitive data. Insights are advisory only.
Use these references to confirm definitions and sanity-check your planning assumptions.
Keep normalizing media metrics with these tools.
Why this digital CPM calculator is different
3 planning modes
Solve CPM, cost, or impressions depending on what you know.
Channel presets
Use starting-point CPM presets for quick scenarios (then replace with your own data).
Copy-ready summary
Generate a clean summary block you can paste into docs, emails, or briefs.
Optional AI insights
Get practical interpretation and next steps without changing the underlying math.
How it works
Pick a mode
Choose whether you want CPM, spend, or impressions.
Enter two numbers
Provide the required inputs; use a preset CPM if you’re planning quickly.
Share and iterate
Copy the summary, then segment by placement/geo/audience to refine the plan.
FAQ
Plan media spend with clearer CPM math
Run quick scenarios, copy summaries, and turn CPM into actionable next steps.
Start calculatingEstimates only. CPM depends on impression definitions (served vs viewable) and on placement mix, geo, and auction competition. Use ranges and segmentation to avoid false precision.
