YouTube Benchmark Explorer
Ask "what is a good YouTube view rate?" and the honest answer is: it depends on the format, the industry, the creative, and where in the funnel the ad is working. A non-skippable ad finishes near 100% by force. A finance skippable ad can cost three times a consumer-goods one. A 60-second cut loses roughly half the viewers a 15-second cut keeps. This explorer sets the inputs for you and then names the one metric that actually decides whether the spend worked at that funnel stage — so you stop reading the wrong number with confidence.
YouTube benchmarks only mean something in context. Cost moves with your industry: cross-network CPV sits near $0.02–$0.03 and connected-TV near $0.04, but the spread runs from roughly two cents in consumer goods to five or six in finance and legal. Completion is set by format and length, not by craft — bumper, non-skippable, and connected-TV finish near 100% because the viewer cannot skip, so the number is worthless as a quality read. View rate is only a real signal on skippable formats, where weak is under ~15%, solid is 15–25%, and strong is above ~40%. And the funnel stage decides which of these you should judge at all: view rate and brand lift at awareness, view-through and view-to-visit at consideration, conversions and incremental ROAS at action. Set those four inputs above and read the benchmark that applies to your spend, not the one a generic blog quoted.
YouTube benchmark explorer
How to use this explorer
- Pick the formatSkippable in-stream, in-feed, Shorts, bumper, non-skippable, or YouTube on TV. The format and its length set the completion physics — a 6-second bumper finishes near 100% no matter how good it is.
- Set the funnel stageThis is the gold panel and the whole point: the stage changes which KPI you should judge. The same ad is graded on view rate at awareness and on conversions at action.
- Choose your industryIndustry moves the cost. The explorer scales CPV and CPM off a sourced cross-network base so a finance buyer sees a steeper number than a consumer-goods buyer, because that is the real spread.
- Choose the creative styleProduced or creator-led (UGC). On short-form and in-feed, creator-style cuts tend to out-engage polished ones, and the view rate adjusts to reflect that.
- Read the judge, watch for the flagThe gold panel names the metric that decides the spend at your stage. If your format and stage are mismatched — judging a reach format at the bottom of the funnel — a red flag tells you to fix the plan, not chase a cheaper view.
RGM Expert Says
The fastest way to waste a YouTube budget is to grade every ad with the same metric. We see it constantly: a team pours money into 6-second bumpers, sees a 95% completion rate, and declares victory — when that 95% was guaranteed the moment they chose a format the viewer cannot skip. Completion on a forced format measures the format, not the work. The skill is knowing which number the placement actually earns and which number it gets for free.
So before we read a single benchmark, we fix the stage. At the top of the funnel the job is qualified attention, so we judge view rate on skippable formats, completion only where the viewer could have left, and brand lift where we can measure it. In the middle we want movement toward the site, so we judge view-through rate, view-to-visit, and click behavior. At the bottom, completion becomes a vanity metric and only conversions, cost per acquisition, and incremental ROAS — proven against a holdout — decide whether the spend paid back. YouTube's own reported conversions tend to over-credit view-through, so we never take the platform number at face value at the action stage.
Cost is the other half. CPV near two to three cents is a reasonable cross-network anchor, and connected-TV runs higher because it is premium, lean-back, sound-on inventory. But the cross-network average hides a wide industry spread, and a finance or legal advertiser who benchmarks against the average will think their account is broken when it is simply expensive by nature. Read your cost against your vertical, read your engagement against your format, and read both against the stage you are actually playing. Do that and the same dashboard that used to flatter you starts telling you the truth.
How it works
The explorer holds two things separate that most benchmark posts blur together: the physics of the placement and the metric that judges it. Format and length set the completion behavior and the headline metric — skippable formats are read on view rate, forced formats on completion. Industry scales the cost off a sourced cross-network base. Creative style nudges engagement on the formats where authenticity beats polish. And the funnel stage, set independently, decides which metric you should actually trust to call the spend a win or a loss.
- View rate (VTR) — the share of impressions that became a counted view on a skippable ad. Real signal only where the viewer could skip; on forced formats it is replaced by completion.
- Completion / VCR — the share that watched to the end. Near 100% on bumper, non-skippable, and connected-TV by force, so it grades the format, not the creative.
- CPV and CPM — cost per view and cost per thousand impressions. Both scale with the industry multiplier, because a scarce, high-value audience costs more to reach.
- Funnel stage — awareness, consideration, or action. It overrides the headline number by naming the KPI that decides the spend, so a forced 100% completion never gets mistaken for a result.
The format completion bands and the cross-network CPV / CPM figures follow published 2026 benchmark studies and Google guidance and are ranges, not promises. The industry and creative-style modifiers are RGM analysis layered on those sourced bases to show direction. Calibrate to your own account, and prove conversion impact with a holdout.
Why one benchmark lies and a stage-aware read tells the truth
Almost every "YouTube is underperforming" audit we run starts with a number read out of context. A team compares its 30% view rate to a blog that quoted 45% — without noticing the blog was measuring in-feed, where the viewer clicked to play, against their skippable in-stream, where the viewer was interrupted. Or they celebrate a sub-one-cent CPV that is cheap because the audience is broad and worthless, while their actual problem is that none of those views convert. A single benchmark, stripped of format and stage, points you at the wrong fix more often than the right one.
The deepest mistake is treating completion as quality. On a forced format, completion is a property of the placement: the viewer cannot leave, so the number arrives near 100% whether the ad is brilliant or unwatchable. Optimizing toward it means optimizing toward nothing. The honest read is to ask what the format could not give you for free — recall and frequency on a bumper, view-through and visits on a skippable mid-funnel ad, conversions on an action campaign — and judge that instead. The explorer's gold panel exists to make that switch automatic.
Stage discipline also protects the budget from the platform's own optimism. YouTube reports view-through conversions generously, and at the action stage that over-credit can make a reach campaign look like a revenue driver when a holdout would show it changed little. So the bottom-of-funnel verdict here is deliberately strict: conversions and incremental ROAS, proven by holding out a comparable audience, not the conversions the platform volunteers. Reach formats still matter — they warm the audience you later retarget — but they earn their keep on awareness metrics, then hand off to an in-feed or Video Action campaign that is allowed to chase the click and the conversion. Naming who does what, at which stage, on which metric, is the difference between a video plan that compounds and one that just spends.
YouTube Ads benchmarks, at a glance
A directional reference for reading each metric in context. Treat every figure as a range and calibrate to your own account — vertical, creative, and competition move all of them. The completion bands and cross-network cost anchors follow published 2026 studies and Google guidance; the per-industry framing is RGM analysis on those bases.
| Metric | Typical range | How to read it in context |
|---|---|---|
| Skippable view rate (VTR) | ~15% weak · 15–25% solid · 40%+ strong | Only meaningful where the viewer can skip. In-feed and Shorts run higher because the play is self-selected. |
| Completion (forced formats) | ~92–100% | Bumper, non-skippable, and connected-TV finish near full by force — a quality non-signal. Judge recall and reach instead. |
| CPV (cost per view) | ~$0.02–$0.03 cross-network; CTV ~$0.04 | Spreads from ~$0.02 (consumer goods) to ~$0.05–$0.06 (finance, legal). Read against your vertical, not the average. |
| CPM (cost per 1,000) | ~$4–$16 by format | Shorts run lowest, connected-TV highest. Premium inventory and high-value verticals push it up. |
| CTR (click-through rate) | ~0.2%–1.5% by format | Low by nature — viewers watch, they do not hunt links. In-feed and Video Action earn more; reach formats earn fewer. |
| Completion by length | sub-15s ~100% → 30–60s ~44% | Longer cuts shed viewers. A falling completion rate on a long ad is the length, not a failure of the creative. |
What disciplined video buyers emphasize
Cost-per-view bidding charges you when a viewer watches 30 seconds of your ad, the full ad if it is shorter than 30 seconds, or interacts with it — so the view you pay for is a view someone chose to give.
Attention is not the same as exposure; the question for video is not whether the ad was served but whether it was actually watched and remembered.
A forced 100% completion proves the viewer could not leave, not that the creative earned the stay. Judge what the format could not hand you for free, and at the bottom of the funnel prove conversions with a holdout.
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What each YouTube format earns for free, and what it has to prove
The single biggest error in reading YouTube numbers is comparing across formats as if they were the same game. Each placement hands you some metrics for free and forces you to earn the rest, and a benchmark only means something once you know which is which. Here is how we read the six formats in the explorer.
Skippable in-stream is the honest format for view rate, because the skip button arrives at five seconds and the viewer can leave the moment your hook fails. A 20% view rate here is a real verdict on your opening; a 40%+ rate means the creative is genuinely holding interrupted attention. This is also where cost-per-view bidding does what it says — you pay for views people chose to give — so CPV efficiency and view rate together tell you whether the ad is worth scaling.
In-feed (Discovery) ads are clicked to play, so their watch rate runs high but means something different: it is opted-in demand, not pushed reach. Read in-feed as a consideration and demand-capture format, not as cold top-of-funnel scale. Its CTR and view-to-visit are the numbers that matter, because the viewer already raised a hand by clicking.
Shorts are vertical, native, and short, so completion runs high simply because the clips end fast — sub-30-second cuts drive the bulk of completions. CPMs are typically the lowest of any format, which makes Shorts attractive for cheap reach, but the cheap completion is a property of the length, not proof your message landed. Pair the low CPM with a recall or view-through read before you call it a win.
Bumper (6 seconds) and non-skippable (15–30 seconds) are forced formats: completion arrives near 100% because the viewer cannot leave. That number is structurally meaningless as a quality signal. Bumpers are frequency-and-recall instruments — use them to reinforce a message the audience already met, and judge them on lift and frequency, never on the completion they were always going to post.
YouTube on TV (connected-TV) is the premium, lean-back, sound-on placement, and completion runs around 95% versus closer to half on mobile. CPMs are the highest of any format because the inventory and the attention are both premium. CTV is your big-screen top-of-funnel touchpoint: judge it on reach, completion among a self-selected lean-back audience, and brand lift, then retarget the warmed audience on a format that is allowed to chase the click.
Why your CPV is "high" and still fine
Cost-per-view and CPM are the benchmarks advertisers most often misread, because the cross-network average buries an enormous industry spread. A cross-network CPV near two to three cents is a fair anchor, and connected-TV running near four cents reflects its premium nature. But a finance, insurance, or legal advertiser can pay two to three times that — five or six cents a view — and be performing perfectly well, because the audience is scarce, the regulatory creative is heavier, and every competitor is bidding for the same narrow pool. A consumer-goods or media advertiser, by contrast, reaches a broad audience cheaply and should expect a CPV at the low end.
This is why the explorer scales cost by industry rather than quoting one number. The mistake we see most is a high-value advertiser benchmarking against a generic blog's cross-network figure, concluding the account is broken, and slashing bids — which simply starves the campaign of the qualified, expensive reach it needed. The right move is to read your CPV against your vertical and your format, then ask the only question that matters at the bottom of the funnel: did those views, at that cost, produce incremental conversions? A cheap view that converts nobody is more expensive than a costly view that does, and no amount of CPV efficiency rescues a campaign that reaches the wrong people. Efficiency is only a virtue once the audience and the offer are right; chase it before that and you simply buy cheap irrelevance at scale.
CPM follows the same logic. Shorts post the lowest CPMs because the inventory is abundant and the attention is brief; connected-TV posts the highest because the screen, the sound, and the lean-back posture are worth a premium. Comparing a Shorts CPM to a CTV CPM and declaring one "better" is a category error — they buy different attention for different jobs. Match the format's cost to the job you hired it for, and the number stops looking alarming.
The one test that turns benchmarks into decisions: the holdout
Every benchmark on this page is a reference point, not a verdict. The verdict, at the action stage, comes from a holdout: you withhold the ad from a comparable slice of your audience, then compare conversions between the exposed group and the held-out group. The difference is incremental — the conversions your YouTube spend actually caused, rather than the conversions that would have happened anyway and got credited to a view.
This matters because YouTube's reported conversions lean generous on view-through, often crediting a conversion to anyone who saw the ad and later converted through any path. At awareness and consideration that over-credit is tolerable, because you are judging attention and movement, not last-click revenue. At the action stage it is dangerous: a reach campaign can look like a revenue engine on platform-reported numbers while a holdout shows it moved very little. We have repeatedly seen a campaign's "ROAS" halve or worse once measured incrementally instead of on platform attribution.
So the discipline is simple to state and hard to skip. Set the stage before you read any number. At awareness, judge qualified reach, view rate on skippable formats, and brand lift. At consideration, judge view-through rate, view-to-visit, and click behavior. At action, judge conversions, cost per acquisition, and incremental return on ad spend proven by a holdout. Let reach formats warm the audience and hand off to in-feed or Video Action campaigns that chase the conversion. Read every cost against your vertical and every engagement metric against its format. Do that, and the benchmarks stop being numbers you compare yourself against and start being a map of where your spend is actually working.