CPC is one of the core cost metrics in Google Ads. It stands for Cost Per Click and refers to the average amount you pay each time a user clicks your advertisement.
CPC helps you understand how your budget is being spent. However, CPC alone is not enough to measure success, because clicks only matter when they contribute to meaningful outcomes such as leads, sales, or other conversions.
CPC is used to monitor cost efficiency and compare performance across keywords, ad groups, and campaigns. It helps you identify which searches generate expensive clicks and which ones bring cheaper traffic.
The calculation is simple:
Total Ad Spend / Total Number of Clicks = CPC
Example:
1,000 / 200 = 5 USD CPC
This means you paid an average of 5 USD per click.
CPC is not determined only by your bid. Several technical factors influence the final click cost:
No. A higher CPC can be reasonable if the keyword produces high-value conversions. CPC should be evaluated together with:
A campaign can remain profitable even with higher CPC when conversion performance is strong.
A low CPC is not automatically “good”. If cheap clicks do not convert, the budget may be wasted. That is why CPC should be reviewed alongside conversion data.
The key question is:
What does this click bring to my business?
From a knowledge base perspective, CPC is an indicator, not an outcome. Sound decisions come from evaluating CPC together with conversion and revenue data.