AdCulator

Campaign Forecast Calculator

Plan your ad spend and project profit, ROAS and break-even CPM — from your budget and funnel, or backwards from a goal.

Campaign Forecast

Project the full funnel — or work back from a goal to the CPM you can afford.

Your campaign
$

Total planned ad spend.

#

Expected impressions served.

%

Click-through rate.

%

Share of clicks that convert.

$

Average value of one conversion.

Profit
ROAS
Break-even CPM

The most you can pay per 1,000 impressions before this campaign stops making money.

CPM
Clicks
Conversions
CPC
CPA
Revenue
Profit margin

How the forecast works

The forecast turns five planning numbers into a complete picture of a campaign. Each input feeds the next step of the funnel:

  • Impressions × CTR → clicks
  • Clicks × conversion rate → conversions
  • Conversions × revenue per conversion → revenue
  • Budget ÷ impressions × 1,000 → CPM; budget ÷ clicks → CPC; budget ÷ conversions → CPA
  • Revenue − budget → profit; revenue ÷ budget → ROAS

Change any input and every downstream number updates instantly, so you can see exactly where a plan makes or loses money.

Plan your ad spend and budget

Think of this as an ad spend calculator that works in both directions. InForecast mode, enter a budget and your funnel assumptions to project exactly what that ad spend should return — clicks, conversions, revenue, profit and ROAS. InGoal-Seek mode it becomes an advertising budget calculator: set the outcome you want (a ROAS, a CPA, a number of conversions, or a revenue or profit target) and it solves for the ad spend you need to get there.

Either way, you can pressure-test an advertising budget before committing a dollar, and see the return on ad spend a plan implies — instead of guessing.

Three ways to forecast

The tool works in three modes, switchable at the top:

  • Forecast — the forward projection: enter your plan and read the outcomes (clicks, conversions, profit, ROAS and break-even CPM).
  • Goal-Seek — work backwards from a target. Set a goal — a ROAS, a CPA, a number of conversions, or a revenue or profit figure — and it solves for what you need to hit it, including the maximum CPM you can afford to pay and the budget required.
  • Scenario Analysis — compare three cases side by side. Hold budget and impressions fixed, then nudge CTR and conversion rate acrossconservative, realistic and optimistic columns to see how profit and ROAS move.

Break-even CPM — the number that matters

The forecast always shows your break-even CPM: the most you can afford to pay per 1,000 impressions before the campaign stops being profitable. It comes purely from your per-click economics:

Break-even CPM = CTR% × Conversion% × Revenue per conversion × 1,000

If the CPM you're actually paying is below this number, you're in profit; if it'sabove, you're losing money on every thousand impressions. It's the fastest way to sanity-check whether a media buy can ever pay off — and it's the reason this tool goes beyond a simpleCPM calculator.

How much do ads cost?

There is no flat rate for online advertising — what you pay depends on the platform, your industry, audience and competition. Costs are usually quoted two ways:cost per 1,000 impressions (CPM)for awareness, and cost per click (CPC) for traffic. As a rough guide, Google Search CPCs range from under a dollar in low-competition verticals to well over $10 in insurance, legal and finance, while Meta CPMs commonly run in the low double digits.

The most reliable number, though, is your own: check typical rates for your vertical in ouradvertising benchmarks, then plug them into the forecaster above to estimate what a specific campaign will cost — and what it should return.

How to use it

  1. Enter your budget and expected impressions.
  2. Add your funnel assumptions — CTR, conversion rate and revenue per conversion.
  3. Read the projected profit, ROAS and break-even CPM; a loss shows in red.
  4. Adjust the inputs to find the plan that works, then copy the results to share.

Frequently asked questions

What is a campaign forecast?
A campaign forecast projects the likely outcome of an ad campaign before you spend, by chaining your inputs — budget, impressions, click-through rate, conversion rate and revenue per conversion — into the full funnel: clicks, conversions, cost per acquisition, revenue, profit and return on ad spend.
How much do Google Ads cost?
There is no flat rate — Google Ads cost depends on your industry, audience and competition. Ads are priced per click (CPC) or per 1,000 impressions (CPM); Google Search CPCs commonly range from under $1 in low-competition verticals to well over $10 in insurance, legal and finance. Check typical rates in our benchmarks, then use this forecaster to estimate a specific campaign's cost.
How do I estimate my ad spend or advertising budget?
Work backwards from a goal: in Goal-Seek mode, enter a target (a ROAS, CPA, number of conversions, or a revenue or profit figure) and the tool solves for the ad spend you need. Or enter a budget in Forecast mode to project the results that spend should deliver.
How is ROAS calculated in the forecast?
ROAS (return on ad spend) is revenue ÷ budget. Revenue is your projected conversions × revenue per conversion, and budget is your total spend. A ROAS of 4× means every $1 spent is expected to return $4 in revenue.
What is break-even CPM?
Break-even CPM is the highest price you can pay per 1,000 impressions before the campaign stops making money. It depends only on your per-click economics — CTR, conversion rate and revenue per conversion — via CTR% × conversion% × revenue × 1,000. If your actual CPM is below it, the campaign is profitable; above it, it loses money.
Why is my profit showing as a loss?
A negative profit (shown in red) means the projected revenue is less than the budget at the inputs you entered. That is a valid outcome, not an error — it usually means your CPM is above break-even, or your CTR, conversion rate or revenue per conversion are too low to cover the spend.
How do I find the maximum CPM I can afford?
Switch to Goal-Seek mode and choose a target ROAS or CPA. The calculator solves for the highest CPM you can pay and still hit that target — the point above which the campaign stops being profitable — along with the equivalent maximum CPC.
Can I compare best- and worst-case scenarios?
Yes. Scenario Analysis holds your budget, impressions and revenue per conversion fixed while you vary CTR and conversion rate across conservative, realistic and optimistic columns, showing profit, ROAS, revenue and CPA for each side by side.
Are these forecasts guaranteed?
No. A forecast is a model based on your assumptions — real campaigns vary with audience, creative, seasonality and competition. Use it to pressure-test a plan and compare scenarios, then validate against your own account data.

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