Definition
Cost per click (CPC) is the price an advertiser pays for each click on a paid ad, determined by the bid, the platform's auction dynamics, ad relevance, and competition for the placement.
CPC is the visible price of a click but not the price of a customer. CPC × clicks needed per conversion gives CPA, and CPA is what determines whether the campaign pays back. A low CPC on traffic that doesn't convert is more expensive than a high CPC on traffic that does.
The levers that move CPC are not just bidding. Google's auction (and similar systems on Meta and LinkedIn) incorporate ad relevance, click-through rate, and landing page experience. Better creative and tighter targeting can cut CPC by 30–50% on the same bid — without sacrificing volume.
Origin
Emerged with PPC advertising in the late 1990s; Google's quality-adjusted auction (2002) decoupled CPC from raw bid, rewarding relevance.
How it works
- The platform runs an auction every time a user matches your targeting.
- Your effective bid (Ad Rank in Google) = bid × Quality Score (or platform equivalent).
- If you win the auction, you pay just enough to beat the next-highest competitor.
- Higher Quality Score = lower CPC at the same position.
- CPC fluctuates with competition, time of day, audience saturation, and creative performance.
When to use it
Use when
- Default pricing model for paid search and most paid social.
- When you can measure a downstream conversion event (so you know whether the click was worth its CPC).
Skip when
- When your goal is reach or impressions — CPM is the right pricing model there.
- On audiences too narrow to support competitive auctions — costs spike on tiny segments.
Key metrics
- CPC itself, by campaign / ad group / keyword.
- Average CPC trend over time.
- CPC vs. CPA (CPA matters more).
Examples
- CPC dropped 40% after we improved Quality Score.
- High CPC is not the problem — low conversion rate after the click is.
- On the same bid, the new creative cut CPC from $4.80 to $2.10.
In practice at Makreate
Makreate optimises CPC through Quality Score, audience refinement, and creative testing — not by lowering bids until volume disappears. A recent fintech client's branded keyword CPC sat at $11.40 — Quality Score of 4 from a slow landing page. We rebuilt the landing page, lifted Quality Score to 9, and CPC fell to $3.80 within three weeks. Same keyword, same position, 67% lower cost.
Advertising →Common mistakes
- Cutting CPC by lowering bids until you lose impression share.
- Optimising CPC at the expense of conversion rate.
- Ignoring Quality Score levers.
- Comparing CPC across campaigns with different intents (branded vs. cold) — those should never be compared.
- Letting auto-bid strategies run unchecked on small accounts. They need data to learn.
Frequently asked
Why is my CPC so high?
Usually some combination of: low Quality Score, broad targeting, high competition, weak creative, or a slow landing page. Address the levers in that order.
What's a good CPC?
Depends entirely on conversion rate and customer LTV. CPC of $20 is fine if it converts at 8% to a $2,000 customer; CPC of $0.50 is bad if it converts at 0.1% to a $20 customer.
Manual CPC or auto-bid?
Manual CPC for accounts with limited data or specialist needs. Auto-bid (target CPA, target ROAS) once the account has enough conversion data for the algorithm to optimise — usually 30+ conversions per month.