📊 Advertising guide

How to Calculate Reach and Frequency

Reach and frequency are the two foundational delivery metrics in media planning. Reach counts how many unique people saw your campaign at least once. Frequency measures how many times, on average, each reached person was exposed to it. This guide covers the core formula, audience coverage, CPM, four worked examples across different campaign types, frequency benchmarks by channel, the reach-frequency trade-off, and the most common planning mistakes.

Last updated: March 28, 2026

What are reach and frequency in advertising?

Every impression-based campaign produces two fundamental measures of delivery: how many different people were exposed, and how many times each was exposed. These are reach and frequency.

Unique exposure
Reach

The count of distinct people or accounts that saw the campaign at least once during the measurement period. Each person is counted only once regardless of how many times they were exposed.

Average repetition
Frequency

The mean number of times each reached person was exposed to the ad. It is a calculated average — some people saw it once, others many times, but frequency summarizes this as a single number.

Impressions are the total sum of all exposures, including repeats. The relationship between the three metrics is fixed by a simple equation:

Impressions = Reach × Average Frequency

This means that for any fixed impression budget, increasing reach always reduces frequency, and increasing frequency always reduces reach. They are two sides of the same delivery coin.

Reach and frequency formula

The primary calculation derives average frequency from impressions and reach:

Average Frequency = Total Impressions ÷ Unique Reach
Total Impressions = all ad exposures served, including repeats
Unique Reach = distinct people exposed at least once
Average Frequency = mean exposures per reached person

To measure what share of your target audience you actually reached, use the audience coverage formula:

Audience Coverage (%) = (Reach ÷ Audience Size) × 100

To estimate cost efficiency when spend is known:

CPM = (Spend ÷ Total Impressions) × 1,000
CPM = cost per 1,000 impressions delivered

To find how many impressions would be needed to reach a target frequency goal with the same audience:

Target Impressions = Target Frequency × Unique Reach

Full delivery waterfall

Here is how all the metrics connect for a sample campaign with 250,000 impressions, 80,000 unique people reached, and a 120,000-person target audience:

Total impressions served 250,000
Unique people reached 80,000
= Average frequency (① ÷ ②) 3.13×
Audience coverage (80,000 ÷ 120,000) 66.67%
Unused audience (120,000 − 80,000) 40,000

How to calculate reach and frequency — step by step

1
Collect your delivery numbers. Pull total impressions and unique reach from your ad platform report. Make sure both cover the same date range and campaign. Note that each platform defines "unique reach" differently — Meta uses people, Google may count cookies or signed-in users, and some DSPs use household-level data.
2
Divide impressions by reach. The result is average frequency. Example: 250,000 impressions ÷ 80,000 reach = 3.13 average frequency. This means the typical reached person saw the ad 3.13 times over the campaign period.
3
Measure coverage against your audience size. Divide reach by the total size of your target audience, then multiply by 100. Example: 80,000 ÷ 120,000 × 100 = 66.67% coverage. This tells you what share of your intended audience was actually touched.
4
Calculate CPM if spend is available. Divide total spend by total impressions, then multiply by 1,000. Example: $3,500 ÷ 250,000 × 1,000 = $14.00 CPM. A lower CPM with similar frequency and coverage is generally more efficient.
5
Compare against your target frequency. Multiply your goal frequency by current reach to find the impressions required. Example: target frequency of 5 × 80,000 reach = 400,000 impressions needed. Compare to the 250,000 delivered to find a gap of 150,000 additional impressions.
6
Interpret in context of campaign objective. A frequency of 3× is not inherently good or bad — it depends on whether you are running a broad awareness push or a tight retargeting sequence. Compare frequency and coverage together rather than either metric in isolation.

Worked examples

Here are four campaigns with different delivery profiles. Each illustrates a different relationship between reach, frequency, and coverage.

Example 1 · Balanced campaign

Mid-funnel awareness

Impressions: 250,000 · Reach: 80,000 · Audience: 120,000 · Spend: $3,500

Frequency = 250,000 ÷ 80,000 = 3.13×
Coverage = 80,000 ÷ 120,000 = 66.67%
CPM = ($3,500 ÷ 250,000) × 1,000 = $14.00

✓ Moderate frequency, strong coverage. A well-balanced awareness campaign profile.

Example 2 · Broad awareness

Upper-funnel brand reach

Impressions: 180,000 · Reach: 110,000 · Audience: 200,000 · Spend: $2,400

Frequency = 180,000 ÷ 110,000 = 1.64×
Coverage = 110,000 ÷ 200,000 = 55.00%
CPM = ($2,400 ÷ 180,000) × 1,000 = $13.33

→ Light frequency may limit recall but covers more than half the audience efficiently.

Example 3 · High-frequency retargeting

Lower-funnel warm audience

Impressions: 320,000 · Reach: 45,000 · Audience: 70,000 · Spend: $4,100

Frequency = 320,000 ÷ 45,000 = 7.11×
Coverage = 45,000 ÷ 70,000 = 64.29%
CPM = ($4,100 ÷ 320,000) × 1,000 = $12.81

⚠ Frequency is high — acceptable for retargeting but worth monitoring for ad fatigue.

Example 4 · Saturated audience

Oversaturated small pool

Impressions: 500,000 · Reach: 30,000 · Audience: 80,000 · Spend: $5,200

Frequency = 500,000 ÷ 30,000 = 16.67×
Coverage = 30,000 ÷ 80,000 = 37.50%
CPM = ($5,200 ÷ 500,000) × 1,000 = $10.40

✕ Extreme frequency with low coverage — audience is saturated. Widen targeting or add exclusions.

Understanding audience coverage

Coverage tells you what percentage of your total target audience pool was exposed to the campaign at least once. A campaign with 90% reach and 66% coverage has touched a majority of the intended audience. A campaign with 90% reach and 10% coverage means the reach number is large but the audience pool is enormous — most people were never touched.

Here is a coverage comparison for campaigns with the same 80,000 unique reach but different audience pool sizes:

Audience size Coverage → Coverage %
120,000 ★
66.67%
200,000
40.00%
500,000
16.00%
1,000,000
8.00%

The same 80,000 reach looks strong against a 120,000-person audience but negligible against a 1,000,000-person pool. Always contextualize reach against the total addressable audience — and make sure the audience size you use is realistic, not aspirational.

Frequency benchmarks by campaign type and channel

There is no universally correct frequency. The right level depends on campaign objective, channel format, creative complexity, and how warm the audience is. These ranges are common planning references — not rules.

📡 < 2× Light exposure Broad upper-funnel brand awareness, sponsorships, large-reach display
🎯 2 – 5× Moderate — typical working range Prospecting, mid-funnel video, social awareness, streaming audio
🔁 5 – 10× High — retargeting territory Warm audience retargeting, cart abandonment, sequential messaging
⚠️ > 10× Extreme — investigate saturation Check for ad fatigue, declining CTR, or overly narrow audience targeting

By channel

Channel Typical freq. Avg CPM Notes
Paid social (Meta) 2 – 5× $8 – $16 Frequency caps recommended for cold audiences
Programmatic display 3 – 7× $2 – $8 Lower CPM but higher frequency risk without caps
Connected TV / OTT 2 – 4× $20 – $40 Premium inventory, household-level frequency
YouTube video 3 – 6× $5 – $15 Skippable vs non-skippable affects recall significantly
Retargeting (any) 5 – 12× $10 – $25 Higher frequency tolerable; monitor click fatigue
Streaming audio 2 – 4× $8 – $20 Users notice audio repetition quickly — cap carefully

The reach-frequency trade-off

With a fixed impression budget, reach and frequency are in direct tension. Buying more reach means lower frequency per person; concentrating impressions on fewer people means higher frequency. Understanding where your campaign sits in this trade-off is essential to evaluating whether delivery matched your objective.

High reach · High frequency Requires the largest impression budget. Ideal for major launch campaigns or highly competitive categories where both breadth and repetition matter. Expensive and often only possible at national scale.
High reach · Low frequency Covers most of the audience but with light exposure. Good for simple, visually striking creative or when awareness rather than recall is the goal. Risk: too little repetition to form memory.
Low reach · High frequency Narrow but deeply exposed audience. Typical retargeting profile. Risk: audience saturation, ad fatigue, diminishing response if frequency grows without expanding reach.
Low reach · Low frequency Thin delivery. Either the audience is very small, the budget is limited, or both. Unlikely to generate meaningful awareness or response. Signals the campaign needs either a larger budget or a tighter targeting strategy.

When to prioritize reach: upper-funnel brand awareness, new product launches, market entry campaigns, reaching segments that have never been exposed to the brand.

When to prioritize frequency: lower-funnel conversion campaigns, retargeting warm visitors, message sequences that require multiple exposures to communicate effectively, high-consideration purchase categories.

Common reach and frequency mistakes

  • Treating impressions as reach. Total impressions include repeat exposures. A campaign with 500,000 impressions and 50,000 reach has 10× average frequency — not 500,000 unique people reached.
  • Evaluating reach without audience context. 100,000 reach sounds strong, but means something very different against a 110,000-person audience (91% coverage) versus a 10,000,000-person audience (1% coverage).
  • Cross-platform reach aggregation without deduplication. Adding reach from Meta + YouTube + display without removing overlap will overcount the true number of unique people reached across the full campaign.
  • Assuming more frequency is always better. Beyond a certain point, additional exposures generate negative response. Declining CTR with rising frequency is a common signal of fatigue — more impressions at that point waste budget.
  • Using reach as the only success metric for awareness campaigns. High reach with weak conversion data may mean the audience is mismatched, not that the campaign underperformed. Always pair delivery metrics with response outcomes.
  • Comparing frequency across platforms without checking definitions. Meta reports person-level frequency. Google may count signed-in users or cookies. A DSP might use household IDs. These are not equivalent — direct comparisons are misleading without understanding each platform's methodology.

FAQ

What is the difference between reach and impressions?

Impressions count every single ad exposure including repeats. Reach counts only the distinct people who were exposed at least once. If 10,000 people each see your ad 3 times, you have 30,000 impressions but 10,000 reach.

Is average frequency the same as effective frequency?

No. Average frequency is a calculated mean across all reached people — it says nothing about the distribution. Effective frequency is a planning concept that asks how many exposures are needed before someone meaningfully processes the message. Traditional media planning often referenced 3 as a threshold, but this varies by channel, format, and category. Average frequency is an output; effective frequency is a planning input.

Can I add reach from multiple platforms together?

Not without deduplication. Raw reach numbers from different platforms include audience overlap — the same person may be counted in Meta reach and Google reach simultaneously. To estimate true cross-channel reach, you need either a unified measurement solution or an overlap estimate from each platform pair.

What is a frequency cap and should I use one?

A frequency cap limits how many times the same user sees your ad within a defined time window. Most platforms support caps at the campaign or ad set level. Caps are generally recommended for cold and prospecting audiences to prevent early saturation, while retargeting campaigns may allow higher limits. A common starting point for cold audiences is 2 to 3 exposures per week.

Does a high frequency always mean ad fatigue?

Not automatically. Ad fatigue is a response problem — it shows up as declining CTR, rising CPM, or falling conversion rate as frequency increases. A campaign running at 8× frequency with stable or improving response metrics is not fatigued. Always check response data alongside frequency, not frequency alone.

How does this calculator handle cross-device or household reach?

The calculator uses whatever unique reach figure you provide. It does not adjust for cross-device, cookie, or household-level definitions — that is a platform-level distinction. If your platform reports household reach instead of person reach, interpret the frequency and coverage outputs in that context.