Ad Frequency & Fatigue Calculator
Calculate how often your audience sees your ads over a given campaign period and estimate when creative fatigue will hurt your ROAS.
Use this free ad frequency calculator to check if your audience is being overexposed to your ads. Enter your campaign impressions, unique reach, and ad spend to instantly see your average frequency, cost per reach, and fatigue risk level — plus get recommendations to keep your campaigns fresh.
📡 Campaign Inputs
📊 Frequency Results
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Optimal frequency ranges before ad fatigue sets in, based on industry data.
| Platform | Optimal Frequency | Fatigue Tipping Point | Recommended Cap |
|---|---|---|---|
| Meta (Facebook/Instagram) | 1.0 – 2.0x | ~3.4x | 3x / 7 days |
| Google Display | 1.5 – 3.0x | ~4.0x | 5x / 7 days |
| YouTube | 2.0 – 3.0x | ~5.0x | 3x / 7 days |
| TikTok | 1.0 – 2.0x | ~3.0x | 2x / 7 days |
| 2.0 – 4.0x | ~5.0x | 4x / 30 days | |
| 2.0 – 3.0x | ~4.5x | 4x / 30 days | |
| Programmatic Display | 1.0 – 2.5x | ~3.5x | 3x / 7 days |
What Is Ad Frequency and Why Does It Matter?
Ad frequency measures how many times, on average, a single person in your audience sees your ad. It is one of the most important — and most overlooked — metrics in paid advertising. Too low, and your audience never remembers your brand. Too high, and you burn through goodwill, waste budget, and tank your campaign performance.
For eCommerce brands running paid ads on Meta, Google, TikTok, and other platforms, managing frequency is the difference between profitable scaling and diminishing returns. This calculator helps you monitor and manage that balance in real time.
The Ad Frequency Formula
The formula is straightforward:
For example, if your campaign delivered 300,000 impressions to 100,000 unique users, your frequency is 3.0 — meaning each person saw your ad three times on average. While simple, this metric has major implications for your click-through rate, cost per acquisition, and overall ROAS.
Understanding Ad Fatigue: The Silent ROAS Killer
Ad fatigue is what happens when your audience sees the same ad so many times that they stop engaging with it. It is one of the most common reasons campaigns plateau or decline in performance, and it can happen faster than most advertisers expect — sometimes in as little as 3–5 days for small, high-frequency audiences.
Signs of Ad Fatigue
Watch for these warning signals in your campaign data: declining click-through rates over time, rising cost per click and cost per acquisition, lower engagement rates on social platforms, an increase in ad hides or negative feedback (particularly on Meta), and frequency metrics that keep climbing without corresponding conversion growth.
Fatigue Thresholds by Campaign Type
Not all campaigns have the same fatigue threshold. Prospecting campaigns targeting cold audiences typically see fatigue between 2.5–3.5 frequency, because the audience has no prior relationship with your brand. Retargeting campaigns can tolerate higher frequencies (4–7x) since the audience is already warm. Brand awareness campaigns often need higher frequency (3–5x) to drive recall, but should be paired with creative rotation.
How to Prevent Ad Fatigue and Maintain Campaign Performance
1. Rotate Creatives Regularly
The single most effective way to combat ad fatigue is to keep your creatives fresh. Plan for a minimum of 3–5 unique creatives per ad set, and refresh them every 2–3 weeks. Use a mix of formats — static images, video, carousel, and UGC — to keep the experience varied for your audience.
2. Use Frequency Caps
Most ad platforms allow you to set frequency caps that limit how many times a person sees your ad in a given time period. On Google Display, you can cap at the campaign or ad group level. On Meta, frequency caps are available through reach and frequency buying. Set caps based on the benchmarks above.
3. Expand Your Audience
If your frequency is climbing fast, your audience may be too narrow. Broaden your targeting with lookalike expansion, interest stacking, or broader geographic targeting. A larger audience pool naturally keeps frequency lower while maintaining reach goals.
4. Leverage Dynamic Creative Optimization (DCO)
DCO automatically tests combinations of headlines, images, descriptions, and CTAs. This creates dozens of ad variations from a handful of assets, dramatically reducing the chance that any one person sees the exact same creative repeatedly.
5. Monitor the Right Metrics
Track frequency alongside CTR, CPC, and CPA over time. When frequency rises and performance dips simultaneously, it is time to act. Set up automated rules in your ad platform to alert you when frequency exceeds your threshold or when CTR drops below a set level.
Frequently Asked Questions
Ad frequency is the average number of times a single person in your target audience sees your ad over a given time period. It is calculated by dividing total impressions by unique reach. A frequency of 3.0 means each person saw your ad an average of three times.
Ad frequency is calculated with a simple formula: Frequency = Total Impressions ÷ Unique Reach. For example, if your campaign delivered 100,000 impressions to 25,000 unique people, your frequency is 4.0.
For Facebook (Meta) ads, an optimal frequency is between 1.0 and 2.0 for prospecting campaigns. Performance typically peaks around 1.8–2.5 frequency. Research shows the tipping point for ad fatigue on Facebook is approximately 3.4, after which click-through rates decline significantly.
Ad fatigue occurs when your audience has seen your ad so many times that they start ignoring it or reacting negatively. Signs include declining click-through rates (CTR), rising cost per click (CPC), increasing cost per acquisition (CPA), lower engagement, and higher negative feedback or ad hides.
Ad fatigue thresholds vary by platform and campaign type. Generally, frequencies above 3.0 for prospecting and above 5.0 for retargeting start showing fatigue. On Facebook, the tipping point is around 3.4. On Google Display, fatigue often begins around 4–5. More creative variations can push this threshold higher.
To reduce ad fatigue: rotate ad creatives every 2–3 weeks, use frequency caps in your ad platform, expand your target audience, test new ad formats (video, carousel, UGC), refresh headlines and copy regularly, exclude audiences who have already converted, and use dynamic creative optimization (DCO).
Yes. B2B campaigns typically have a lower optimal frequency (median of 2.51) because the audience is smaller and decision cycles are longer. B2C campaigns can tolerate slightly higher frequencies (median of 2.43 for consideration campaigns). B2B audiences also tend to experience fatigue sooner.
Awareness campaigns work best at 2–3 impressions per week. Consideration campaigns can go to 3–5 per week. Conversion and retargeting campaigns may push to 5–7 per week, since the audience is already warm. Always monitor performance metrics to adjust.
More ad creatives distribute impressions across different visuals and messages, which delays ad fatigue. If you have 5 creatives instead of 1, each person sees a different ad, effectively lowering the perceived frequency. We recommend having at least 3–5 active creatives per ad set to maintain freshness.
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