Facebook Ads Insights Tool

Facebook Ads CTR Benchmarks for Media in Sweden

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

CTR (Click Through Rate) for Media in Sweden

October 2024 - October 2025

Insights

Detailed observation of presented data

This analysis looks at click-through-rate (CTR) trends for industry Media and target country Sweden compared to the global trend. The analysis is based on $3B worth of advertising data from our dataset, which provides strong directional benchmarks.

Key takeaways

  • Level vs. market: Media CTR in Sweden averages 4.04%, which is 127% above the global baseline average of 1.78% over the same months—clearly above market.
  • Highs and lows: Sweden peaks at 7.92% (Jul 2025) and bottoms at 0.88% (Feb 2025), a wide 7.04 percentage-point range; the global baseline ranges only 0.35 points (1.67%–2.02%).
  • Trend direction: From Oct 2024 to Aug 2025, Sweden declines 44% (2.55% to 1.42%), while the global baseline rises 15% (1.76% to 2.02%).
  • Volatility: Sweden shows high month-to-month swings averaging 3.00 percentage points; the global baseline is much steadier at 0.05 points.
  • Seasonality: Sweden shows a sharp December spike and sustained highs from April through July, whereas the global trend climbs gradually through spring and summer.

Media CTR in Sweden: overview of the selected data

  • Average CTR: 4.04%; median: 2.55%.
  • High: 7.92% in Jul 2025; notable high cluster Apr–Jul (7.34% in Apr, 6.10% in May, 6.36% in Jun).
  • Low: 0.88% in Feb 2025; other softer months include Nov 2024 (1.01%) and Aug 2025 (1.42%).
  • First-to-last change: down 44% from Oct 2024 (2.55%) to Aug 2025 (1.42%).
  • Volatility: average month-to-month absolute change of 3.00 percentage points.
  • Notable swings:
  • Up +6.18 points from Nov to Dec 2024 (1.01% to 7.19%).
  • Up +5.51 points from Mar to Apr 2025 (1.83% to 7.34%).
  • Down −6.50 points from Jul to Aug 2025 (7.92% to 1.42%).

How Sweden compares to the global baseline

  • Average level: Sweden’s 4.04% CTR sits well above the baseline’s 1.78%—an above-market position by 2.26 percentage points on average.
  • Highs and lows:
  • Sweden high 7.92% vs. baseline high 2.02% (Aug 2025).
  • Sweden low 0.88% vs. baseline low 1.67% (Feb 2025).
  • Volatility: Sweden’s 3.00-point average monthly move contrasts with the baseline’s 0.05 points, indicating much greater variability in Sweden’s Media CTR.
  • Direction: While Sweden trends downward from Oct to Aug (−44%), the global curve trends upward (+15%). The baseline continues to edge up to 2.12% by Sep 2025, reinforcing a steady global climb.

Seasonal patterns and timing

  • Sweden: pronounced December spike (7.19%) and a high plateau in late spring and summer (Apr–Jul), followed by a sharp drop in August.
  • Global: modest softness through winter (Nov–Feb) and a gradual build from March into late summer, aligning with broader Facebook Ads benchmark seasonality where engagement often improves into Q3.

Understanding click-through-rate benchmarks on Facebook Ads in industry Media and Sweden 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 Media industry, Facebook ad costs can be influenced by seasonal trends and market competition. For campaigns targeting Sweden, advertisers should consider local market factors and user behavior. 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.

Sweden Advertising Landscape

National Holidays

Jan 1New Year's Day
Jan 6Epiphany
Apr 18Good Friday
Apr 20Easter Sunday
Apr 21Easter Monday
May 1Labour Day
May 29Ascension Day
Jun 6National Day
Jun 21Midsummer Day
Nov 1All Saints' Day
Dec 25Christmas Day
Dec 26Second Day of Christmas

Key Shopping Season

Late November (Black Friday is huge), December (Christmas and post-Christmas sales), June (Midsummer seasonal promotions), January (Winter sale season)

Potential Advertising Impact

CPMs might spike during Black Friday and early December, especially in e‑commerce and fashion. Easter and Midsummer holidays often decrease weekday inventory but increase media usage during long weekends. Midsummer tends to be quiet in retail but active in travel and food sectors. Post-Christmas sales in January still see high digital ad demand.

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.