Facebook Ads Insights Tool

Facebook Ads CTR Benchmarks for Consumer Goods in United States

See how your CTR stacks up. Explore industry, regional, and campaign-type benchmarks with Superads.

CTR (Click Through Rate) for Consumer Goods in United States

October 2024 - October 2025

Insights

Detailed observation of presented data

Key takeaways

  • United States Consumer Goods click-through-rate sits slightly below the global benchmark on average (1.79% vs. 1.81%), but outperforms from June onward.
  • Strong seasonal upswing: CTR climbs steadily from late spring, peaking in September (2.22%). Q4 2024 is comparatively softer.
  • Volatility is modest overall, with average month-to-month movement of about 0.06 percentage points, a touch higher than the global baseline (0.05 pp).
  • From the first to the last month, United States CTR rises 29.4%, outpacing the global increase of 20.1%.

Introduction

This analysis looks at click-through-rate trends for industry Consumer Goods and target country United States compared to the global trend. The analysis is based on $3B worth of advertising data from our dataset, which provides strong directional benchmarks. The goal is to benchmark Facebook Ads CTR patterns against worldwide performance to understand relative positioning by month and season.

United States Consumer Goods CTR overview

  • Average across the period: 1.79%.
  • High: 2.22% in September 2025.
  • Low: 1.65% in November 2024.
  • Range: 0.57 percentage points.
  • Growth from first to last month: +29.4% (1.72% in Oct 2024 to 2.22% in Sep 2025).
  • Volatility: average absolute month-to-month change ≈ 0.06 pp.
  • Notable movements:
  • Early softness: a dip in November 2024 (-0.07 pp month-over-month) with a flat stretch through April 2025 (1.66–1.68% band).
  • Spring–summer surge: sharp increases in June (+0.16 pp), July (+0.12 pp), and September (+0.20 pp), culminating in the period high.

Seasonality is evident: performance is subdued in Q4 2024, stabilizes in Q1–Q2, and accelerates markedly through summer into back-to-school in late Q3, where CTR peaks.

Comparison with the global baseline

  • Average level: United States trails the global average by about 1.1% relative (1.79% vs. 1.81%), indicating slightly below-market performance for most of the period.
  • Highs and lows:
  • Global high: 2.12% (September 2025).
  • Global low: 1.67% (February 2025).
  • The United States ultimately surpasses the global high, finishing above market in September.
  • Volatility: global average month-to-month change ≈ 0.05 pp vs. 0.06 pp for the United States, a marginally choppier profile domestically.
  • Relative positioning by month:
  • Below market from October through May.
  • Above market from June through September, with the largest positive gap in September (+0.11 pp).
  • Seasonal alignment:
  • Both series show softer Q4 2024 levels and a steady climb from spring into Q3.
  • The United States shows a stronger late-cycle surge, especially July–September (United States avg. 2.07% vs. global 2.01% in that window).

SEO summary

These Facebook Ads benchmarks highlight that United States Consumer Goods click-through-rates were modestly below global norms for most of the year, then moved above market in summer and peaked in September. The pattern shows muted Q4 activity, stabilization in early 2025, and a pronounced upswing in late Q2–Q3. Understanding click-through-rate benchmarks on Facebook Ads in industry Consumer Goods and United States helps advertisers make more efficient budget and creative choices.

Understanding the Data

Insights & analysis of Facebook advertising costs

Click-Through Rate (CTR) is the percentage of impressions that resulted in a click on the Facebook ad. In the Consumer Goods industry, Facebook ad costs can be influenced by seasonal trends and market competition. For campaigns targeting United States, advertisers often face higher costs due to high competition and purchasing power. Different campaign objectives lead to varying costs based on how Facebook optimizes for your specific goals. Why we use median instead of average We use the median CTR because the underlying distribution of click-through rates is highly skewed, with a small share of campaigns achieving extremely high CTRs. These outliers can inflate a simple average, making it less representative of what most advertisers actually experience. By using the median—which sits at the midpoint of all campaigns—we provide a more rigorous and realistic benchmark that reflects the true underlying data model and helps you set attainable performance expectations. The data shown represents median values across multiple campaigns, and individual results may vary based on ad quality, audience targeting, and campaign optimization.

Why we use median instead of average

We use the median CTR because the underlying distribution of click-through rates is highly skewed, with a small share of campaigns achieving extremely high CTRs. These outliers can inflate a simple average, making it less representative of what most advertisers actually experience. By using the median—which sits at the midpoint of all campaigns—we provide a more rigorous and realistic benchmark that reflects the true underlying data model and helps you set attainable performance expectations.

Key Factors Affecting Facebook Ad Costs

  • Competition within your selected industry and audience demographics
  • Ad quality and relevance score – higher quality ads can lower costs
  • Campaign objective and bid strategy
  • Timing and seasonality – costs often increase during holiday periods
  • Ad placement (News Feed, Instagram, Audience Network, etc.)

Note: This data represents industry median values and benchmarks. Your actual costs may vary based on specific targeting, ad creative quality, and campaign optimization.

Optimize Smarter with Superads

Improve your Facebook ad performance

Instant performance insights – See which ads, audiences, and creatives drive results.

Data-driven creative decisions – Spot patterns to improve ROAS.

Effortless reporting – No spreadsheets, just clear insights.

Get Started for free →

The data behind the benchmarks

All data is sourced from over $3B in Facebook ad spend, collected across thousands of ad accounts that use Superads daily to analyze and improve their campaigns. Every data point is fully anonymized and aggregated—no individual advertiser is ever exposed.

This dataset updates frequently as new ad data flows in. It will only get bigger and better.

United States Advertising Landscape

National Holidays

Jan 1New Year's Day
Jan 20Martin Luther King Jr. Day
Feb 17Presidents' Day
May 26Memorial Day
Jun 19Juneteenth
Jul 4Independence Day
Sep 1Labor Day
Oct 13Columbus Day
Nov 11Veterans Day
Nov 27Thanksgiving Day
Dec 25Christmas Day

Key Shopping Season

Late November (Thanksgiving & Black Friday weekend), December (Christmas), Back-to-school (July–September), Summer travel season (Memorial Day onwards)

Potential Advertising Impact

CPM and CPC might rise around major holidays like Memorial Day, Independence Day, and Labor Day, especially in travel and entertainment. Black Friday/Thanksgiving weekend triggers massive spikes in retail ad competition. December ad demand typically peaks—retail campaigns require significantly higher budgets. Back-to-school promotions drive increased competition. Juneteenth may see regional engagement rise.

What is CTR and why does it matter for Facebook ads?

CTR (Click-Through Rate) is the percentage of people who click your ad after seeing it. It's calculated by dividing total clicks by total impressions, then multiplying by 100. A high CTR indicates your ad resonates with your audience and helps improve your relevance score, which can lower your overall costs.

What's the average CTR for Facebook ads in 2025?

The average Facebook ad CTR across industries sits around 0.90-1.10%. But there's significant variation. Your specific industry, audience targeting, and campaign objectives should determine your benchmark.

Why is my Facebook ad CTR consistently low?

Low CTR usually stems from poor audience targeting, weak creative, or a disconnect between your ad content and audience needs. Your ad might simply not be standingo out enough. Check if your visuals grab attention, your copy addresses clear pain points, and your audience targeting aligns with people genuinely interested in your offer.

Is CTR still a reliable metric for ad performance in 2025?

Yes—but only in context. High CTR is a signal that your creative works, but it doesn't guarantee conversions. Use it alongside other metrics like conversion rate to get the full picture.