How to Estimate Your Website's Ad Revenue Before You Build It
By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026 · Calculators
Most people discover ad revenue math the hard way, after months of writing, when the first payout lands far below what they imagined. A few minutes with an ad revenue calculator up front can prevent that disappointment by translating a traffic dream into a realistic dollar figure. The only honest starting question is: how many pageviews can you reasonably reach, and what is a typical earning rate for your topic? Get those two numbers roughly right and the rest is arithmetic.
The cleanest mental model is RPM, or revenue per 1,000 pageviews. RPM already bundles together how many ad slots you run, how often they fill, and the commission your network keeps, which is why it is the number publishers quote to each other. The formula is just earnings equals pageviews times RPM divided by 1,000. A site doing 100,000 monthly pageviews at a $5 RPM earns about $500 a month. Double the RPM by moving into a higher-value niche and you double the income without adding a single visitor.
CPM works from the advertiser's side and is useful when you are quoted a rate per 1,000 impressions rather than per pageview. Here you must account for how many ad units sit on each page, because impressions equal pageviews times ads-per-page. Three ad units at a $5 CPM behave like a $15 page RPM. That multiplier is tempting, but stacking ad units hurts page speed and viewability, and low-viewability impressions often pay little, so more ads rarely means proportionally more money.
Niche choice is the single biggest lever the calculator will reveal. Lifestyle, recipes, and entertainment commonly land around $1-$3 RPM, mid-tier tech and how-to content often reaches $5-$15, and finance, health, real estate, and insurance can climb well beyond that, especially with audiences in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, or Australia. Plug in two different RPMs for the same traffic and the gap is usually larger than any traffic increase you could realistically achieve in a year.
Finally, remember what the number cannot capture. Ad rates rise in Q4 and dip in January, fill rates vary, ad blockers shave off a slice of impressions, and your network takes its cut before you see a cent. Use the calculator to compare scenarios, set a target, and decide whether a project is worth your time, then update your inputs with real data from your dashboard once traffic starts flowing. The estimate is a compass, not a contract.
Quick tips
- Start with RPM rather than CPM when you can, because it already includes ad count and the network's cut, leaving fewer ways to overestimate.
- Run the numbers twice, once with a conservative RPM and once optimistic, to see your realistic earnings range instead of a single hopeful figure.
- When modeling CPM, keep ads-per-page modest; piling on units inflates the estimate but real viewability and page-speed penalties claw most of it back.
- Adjust your RPM upward for Tier-1 (US, UK, Canada, Australia) traffic and downward for broad global audiences, since visitor location heavily drives ad rates.
The Ad Revenue Calculator is free to use as often as you like — no signup required.