CTR Calculator
Four click-through rate modes in one tool โ calculate CTR from clicks and impressions, estimate expected clicks from a target CTR, find the impressions needed to hit a click goal, or compare two CTRs and measure the relative change. Every result comes with channel benchmark context.
Choose a CTR mode
Pick what you want to find. Enter the two values you know and click Calculate.
Know clicks and impressions. Calculate your click-through rate.
Know impressions and a target CTR. Estimate how many clicks to expect.
Know a click target and CTR. Find how many impressions you need.
Compare two CTRs and find the absolute and relative change between them.
CTR formula
CTR (%) = Clicks รท Impressions ร 100
Clicks = Impressions ร CTR รท 100
Impressions = Clicks รท (CTR รท 100)
Absolute vs relative change
Going from 2% to 3% CTR is +1 percentage point absolute change but +50% relative change. Both matter โ relative change shows how much you improved, absolute shows the real-world impact on clicks.
What is CTR?
Click-through rate (CTR) is the percentage of people who click on a link after seeing it โ whether that is a paid ad, an organic search result, an email subject line, or a social media post. It is calculated as clicks divided by impressions, multiplied by 100.
CTR is one of the most widely used metrics in digital marketing because it measures engagement efficiency โ how well your creative, copy, and targeting are working relative to the audience reached. A low CTR with high impressions means you are being seen but not compelling action.
CTR benchmarks by channel
A "good" CTR depends heavily on channel, industry, placement, and intent. These are typical ranges from industry data โ use them as directional context, not hard targets.
Absolute vs relative CTR change
When measuring improvement, it is important to distinguish between absolute and relative CTR change โ they tell different stories.
Marketing reports often cite relative change ("50% improvement in CTR") because it sounds more impressive. Always check which metric is being used โ a 50% relative change from a 0.2% CTR base is only 0.1 percentage points of real-world impact.
Frequently asked questions
What is CTR and how is it calculated?
CTR (click-through rate) is the percentage of impressions that resulted in a click. Formula: CTR = (Clicks รท Impressions) ร 100. For example, 120 clicks from 5,000 impressions gives a CTR of 2.4%.
What is a good CTR for Google Ads?
For Google Search Ads, a CTR of 2โ5% is typical across most industries. High-intent keywords or branded terms can reach 10โ20%. Display ads typically see 0.1โ0.5%. These benchmarks vary significantly by industry, match type, and ad position.
What is a good CTR for SEO?
Position 1 in Google organically attracts 25โ40% of clicks for navigational queries and 15โ25% for informational ones. By position 3, CTR drops to 8โ12%, and by position 10 it is typically 1โ3%. Featured snippets can increase CTR from lower positions significantly.
Does a higher CTR always mean better performance?
Not necessarily. A high CTR with poor conversion rate suggests you are attracting the wrong audience or setting misleading expectations. CTR should always be evaluated alongside downstream metrics like conversion rate, cost per acquisition, and revenue โ not in isolation.
What is the difference between CTR and conversion rate?
CTR measures how many people clicked after seeing an ad or result (clicks รท impressions). Conversion rate measures how many people completed a desired action after clicking (conversions รท clicks). CTR is top-of-funnel; conversion rate is post-click. Both need to be optimised separately.
Related calculators
These tools pair naturally with CTR analysis.
Disclaimer
CTR benchmarks cited are general industry averages and vary significantly by industry, geography, device, ad format, bidding strategy, and audience. All calculations use standard CTR arithmetic. Use results as directional guidance alongside your own campaign data and analytics platform reporting.