CPM (Cost Per 1,000 Impressions) doesn’t need to stay below your daily ad spend—that’s not a useful benchmark on its own. For example, a $50 daily budget with a $30 CPM gives you ~1,666 impressions, which could still be profitable if your ad converts well.
CPM × CTR = CPC → High CPM is fine if CTR is strong.
CPM only becomes a concern if it’s high and not converting.
Ways to Lower CPM If It Feels Too High:
1. Refresh Creatives
Repeating ads can trigger ad fatigue, leading to higher CPMs. Change images, hooks, or formats.
2. Improve Engagement Rate
Meta rewards high-performing ads with lower CPM. Add strong CTAs, better visuals, or user-focused messaging.
3. Test Placement Adjustments
Try Automatic Placements vs. manual (or remove underperforming ones like Audience Network).
4. Narrow or Rethink Targeting
If you’re targeting a super competitive audience, try a lookalike or broad audience with exclusions to reach less saturated segments.
5. Optimize Delivery Settings
For campaigns set to conversions, ensure events are tracking properly. A broken pixel or delayed signal may hurt delivery efficiency.