Marketing Analytics

CTR Calculator

Calculate CTR, clicks, or required impressions. Enter any two, get the third.

Calculate CTR, clicks, or impressions

Enter any two values

What is CTR?

CTR (Click-Through Rate) measures how often people click your ad after seeing it.

CTR = (Clicks ÷ Impressions) × 100

Clicks = (CTR × Impressions) ÷ 100

Impressions = (Clicks ÷ CTR) × 100

What is CTR?

CTR is the percentage of people who click on a link, ad, email, or post after seeing it. It’s the standard performance metric across paid search, display, social, email, and influencer marketing.

A higher number means the creative and placement are working. A lower one means at least one of them isn’t.

CTR formula

The CTR formula uses two inputs to produce one output, and the same equation can be rearranged to solve for any of the three variables, which is what the calculator above does.

CTR = (Clicks ÷ Impressions) × 100

An ad with 1,200 clicks across 60,000 impressions has a CTR of 2%.

Clicks = (CTR × Impressions) ÷ 100

At a 2% CTR across 500,000 impressions, projected clicks are 10,000. This is the math behind most media plans: once you have a CTR benchmark for the channel, you can forecast traffic from any planned impression volume.

Impressions = (Clicks ÷ CTR) × 100

If a campaign needs 5,000 clicks at an expected 1% CTR, required impressions are 500,000. This is useful for sizing media budgets and pressure-testing whether a click goal is realistic at the planned spend.

What is a good CTR? Benchmarks by channel

A good CTR depends on the channel, the audience, and what the user was doing when they saw the ad. A 1% CTR is strong for display and weak for paid search, and the same creative will produce different numbers on TikTok than on Facebook. The benchmarks below are anchors rather than targets.

  • Search ads: 5% to 9% on average. WordStream’s 2025 Google Ads benchmarks place the cross-industry average at 6.66%, with high-intent categories such as arts and entertainment reaching 13% and lower-intent categories such as dental services closer to 5.5%.
  • Display ads: 0.2% to 1%, with a cross-industry average around 0.46%.
  • Social ads: 0.5% to 2%. Facebook feed runs at 1% to 1.5%, Instagram feed and Stories at 0.2% to 0.9%, TikTok generally below 1% with video formats outperforming static.
  • Email: 1% to 5%, with the cross-industry average around 2% per MailerLite’s 2025 data.
  • Influencer content: 1% to 3% when tracked through bio links, affiliate URLs, or swipe-ups, with strong campaigns reaching 5% or higher.

Why good CTR depends on context

Four things move CTR more than anything else.

  • Industry and channel, because high-intent categories see higher CTRs than diffuse-intent ones.
  • Audience targeting, because tightly defined audiences produce higher CTRs even when total click volume drops.
  • Platform, because each one has its own baseline.
  • Intent level, because the same ad shown to a user actively searching for a product will outperform one shown mid-scroll in a feed.

The most useful CTR benchmark is your own historical performance on the same channel and creative type. Industry averages are just a sanity check rather than a target.

What influencer benchmarks look like

CTR is the wrong question to ask for most influencer placements. The majority of in-feed content on Instagram and TikTok has no clickable link inside the post itself, which means engagement rate per reach is the metric the industry tracks, and it’s the one Hypefy’s data is built on.

From 16,486 posts across 958 influencer campaigns measured on Hypefy:

  • TikTok micro creators (10K to 50K followers) hit 31.6% engagement per reach, the highest engagement tier in the dataset across both platforms.
  • TikTok mega accounts (500K+) drop to 6.7% engagement per reach and carry 15% doubtful followers on average.

CTR is the right metric when you have trackable links in the funnel, and engagement rate per reach is the number to forecast against for in-feed work. Check any creator’s rate with the Instagram engagement rate calculator.

Spend only on real reach

Part of the follower count behind a creator’s reach can be inactive or purchased accounts, padded with bots. Those followers never click, because there is no real person behind them, and you pay for the reach either way.

A calculator can’t catch this. The math above runs on impressions that were already served, and it has no way to know how many of them reached an active audience.

Hypefy vets creators and connects you with real people and real communities, so your budget reaches an audience that can respond.

What affects your CTR

Three things move CTR more than anything else.

  • Creative and messaging. Headlines do most of the work, and specific benefits beat vague ones. Visuals matter on visual platforms, where creator-shot content typically outperforms studio-shot ads.
  • Targeting and relevance. Tight audience match raises CTR almost without exception, and intent alignment matters just as much. The same ad shown to someone actively searching for the product will outperform one shown mid-scroll in a feed.
  • Placement and visibility. The first slot of a search results page gets 2× to 3× the CTR of lower ones, and the same logic applies above versus below the fold. In-feed social placements typically outperform sidebar ones.

How to improve your CTR

Five things move CTR more than anything else, in rough order of impact:

  1. Write stronger headlines. Lead with a clear benefit. Headlines with numbers, deadlines, or named outcomes consistently outperform generic ones.
  2. Use direct calls to action. “Get the guide” or “claim 30% off” beats “learn more,” since specific CTAs tell the user what happens after the click.
  3. A/B test creatives. The winning variant in a batch of five to ten typically meaningfully outperforms the campaign average. Brands that don’t test never find that variant.
  4. Improve audience targeting. Move from broad to lookalike, from cold to retargeted, from interest-based to intent-based. The audience change often matters more than the creative change.
  5. Match the ad to user intent. A bottom-funnel ad shown to a top-funnel audience produces low CTR no matter how good the creative is. Match the message to where the user is in the journey.

Forecast campaign performance before you hire

A CTR calculator works when you already have impressions and clicks to plug in. For an influencer campaign that hasn’t launched, the question is what numbers to use at the planning stage.

Hypefy’s Smart Pricing reads each creator’s recent reach, engagement, and CPE before you make an offer, so the projection is based on what their content delivers. Build a shortlist, run match tests, and get rate projections without paying until the campaign goes live.

CTR calculator FAQs

How do you calculate CTR?

CTR is calculated by dividing clicks by impressions and multiplying by 100. The formula is (Clicks ÷ Impressions) × 100. This means that an ad with 200 clicks and 10,000 impressions has a CTR of 2%. Hypefy's CTR calculator solves the equation in either direction, so you can also calculate clicks from a known CTR and impression count, or work out the impressions you'd need to hit a specific click goal.

What is a good CTR?

Averages vary by channel. Search ads run at 5% to 9%, display at 0.2% to 1%, social at 0.5% to 2%, and email at 1% to 5%. A good CTR is one that exceeds the average for your specific channel, audience, and intent level, rather than a single universal number.

What's a good CTR for influencer marketing?

When influencer content carries a trackable link, such as a bio link, affiliate URL, or swipe-up, CTRs typically fall between 1% and 3%, with strong campaigns reaching 5% or higher. For in-feed content without a clickable link, engagement rate per reach is the metric to track instead. On Hypefy, TikTok micro creators (10K to 50K followers) average 31.6% engagement per reach, while mega accounts (500K+) drop to 6.7%.

Why is my CTR low?

Low CTR usually comes from one of three places: a creative that doesn't match the audience, targeting that's too broad, or an offer that isn't compelling. The fastest way to diagnose it is to test each variable in isolation, since the one that most improves CTR is the one that was holding the campaign back.

Is CTR the same as conversion rate?

No. CTR measures the percentage of people who click on an ad after seeing it. Conversion rate measures the percentage of those clickers who complete a desired action like buying, signing up, or downloading. A campaign can have a high CTR and a low conversion rate, which usually points to a weak landing page, or the opposite, which usually points to weak creative.

How often should I track CTR?

Daily for active paid campaigns, weekly for ongoing performance reviews, and at every creative refresh. Watching CTR in real time helps spot creative fatigue early, since the moment a previously strong ad starts declining is when to swap in a new variant.

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Hypefy Inc. | Hypefy World d.o.o. | Selska cesta 217, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia
VAT ID HR89393159477 | IBAN: LT053250094708891892 Copyright © 2025. All Rights Reserved Hypefy Inc.

Try Hypefy today

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Start measuring results instantly.

Hypefy Inc. | Hypefy World d.o.o. | Selska cesta 217, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia
VAT ID HR89393159477 | IBAN: LT053250094708891892 Copyright © 2025. All Rights Reserved Hypefy Inc.

Free CTR Calculator | Hypefy | Hypefy