CPC, or Cost Per Click, is the amount an advertiser pays each time a user clicks on their ad. Unlike CPM, which charges per thousand impressions, CPC only costs money when someone takes action. If your ad is shown a million times but no one clicks, you pay nothing. This makes CPC a highly efficient model for performance-driven campaigns where the goal is to drive traffic, leads, or sales rather than simply build awareness.
How CPC Works in Practice
In platforms like Google Ads and Meta Ads, CPC is determined through auctions. Advertisers set a maximum bid they’re willing to pay per click, and the platform’s algorithm weighs that bid against ad quality scores and audience targeting to determine who wins each impression and at what cost. A higher quality score (better ad relevance, better landing page experience) can lower your actual CPC even if your bid is competitive. Understanding the auction mechanics helps you optimize spend.
Calculating the Value of a Click
CPC only makes financial sense if the value of a converted click exceeds the cost. Start with your conversion rate and your average order value or lead value. If your landing page converts 3% of visitors and each conversion is worth $100, then each click is worth $3 in expected revenue. A CPC above $3 means you’re losing money; below $3 means you’re profitable. This math is the foundation of every paid advertising campaign.
CPC vs. CPM vs. ROAS
CPC is a cost metric. CPM measures cost per thousand impressions. ROAS measures the revenue returned for every dollar of ad spend. Each metric tells you something different. CPC tells you what you’re paying for attention. ROAS tells you whether that attention is generating return. Use all three together to get a full picture of campaign performance.
Reducing Your CPC
Lower CPCs come from better targeting (more relevant audiences click more), better creative (higher click-through rates improve quality scores), better landing pages (search engines reward good user experiences), and negative keyword lists (filtering out irrelevant traffic in search campaigns). Continuous testing and optimization are what separate efficient advertisers from those overpaying for clicks.
The Bottom Line
CPC is the standard performance advertising model for driving direct traffic and conversions. Know what a click is worth to your business before you start bidding, and optimize relentlessly to bring the cost below that threshold. Every dollar of improvement compounds across your campaign volume. Explore more in the business basics library.