Yes, a CTR under 0.1% on YouTube video ads is definitely on the low side—even if traffic looks relevant. But this doesn’t always mean your ad is “bad.” Here's what might be going on, based on common patterns:
1. Ad Format Matters a Lot
If you’re running Skippable In-Stream ads, a low CTR is common—people often just watch (or skip), but don’t click. CTRs here are typically between 0.2–0.5%, so under 0.1% means most viewers aren’t taking action or being enticed.
Try In-Feed ads (formerly Discovery ads) if you haven’t. These are shown in YouTube search results or alongside videos and usually get higher CTRs since they behave more like traditional thumbnail-based content.
2. Misaligned Hook or Message
You might have tested different hooks and CTAs, but if the value proposition isn't instantly clear or it takes too long to get to the “why this matters,” users tune out quickly. First 5 seconds = everything.
Recheck: Is your opening moment pattern-interrupting and speaking to the viewer’s pain point or curiosity?
3. Bad Placement Targeting or Broad Audience
Sometimes your targeting (like keywords, topics, or placements) looks “right” but ends up on low-quality or irrelevant videos. Even worse: mobile games, foreign music, or off-brand entertainment videos.
Check your Placement Report to see where ads are showing. If the context doesn’t match your message, CTR will tank.
4. Quality Score Isn’t Everything
YouTube doesn’t publicly use a “Quality Score” like Google Search, but poor engagement (low CTR, view rate) can affect:
So, in a way, CTR impacts performance indirectly.
Quick Tips:
Test shorter videos (15–30 sec) for higher engagement.
Rework the hook to frontload value/urgency.
Exclude poor placements (apps, channels with low relevance).
Try in-feed format if you’re only using in-stream.