Impressions count every view, including repeats, while reach counts unique people. Impressions equal reach times frequency, so 200,000 people seen 3 times each is 600,000 impressions.
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Impressions are the total number of times your ad or content was served, counting every view including repeats. They are the base currency of paid reach, and they connect directly to budget through CPM and to audience through reach and frequency. The calculator above runs both methods at once so you can see how spend and audience produce the same number from two directions.
There are two clean ways to get to an impressions number, and a good media plan checks both against each other.
From budget and CPM, divide your spend by the CPM and multiply by 1,000. CPM is the cost per 1,000 impressions, so a $5,000 budget at an $8 CPM buys 5,000 / 8 x 1,000, or 625,000 impressions. Lower the CPM and the same budget buys more views, which is why CPM efficiency matters as much as total spend.
From reach and frequency, multiply the unique people you reach by how many times each one sees the ad on average. Reaching 200,000 people at a frequency of 3 produces 200,000 x 3, or 600,000 impressions. This second method ties impressions to real audience exposure rather than to a price, which makes it the better sanity check on whether a campaign is buying enough delivery.
These three numbers describe the same campaign from different angles, and the relationship between them is exact: impressions equal reach times frequency. Reach is the count of unique people who saw your ad at least once. Frequency is the average number of times each of those people saw it. Multiply the two and you get impressions, the total count of views.
The practical takeaway is that impressions alone hide a lot. A campaign with 600,000 impressions could mean 600,000 people each saw your ad once, or 100,000 people each saw it six times. The first builds broad awareness, the second drives frequency into a smaller group. Whenever you read an impressions figure, ask what reach and frequency produced it before you judge the result.
Use impressions to forecast ad delivery before you commit budget. Start with the goal: if you want to reach 200,000 people three times, you need 600,000 impressions, and at an $8 CPM that costs roughly $4,800. Flip the calculation when budget is fixed instead: a $5,000 budget at an $8 CPM gives you 625,000 impressions, which at a frequency of 3 reaches about 208,000 people.
The implied CPM and cost per impression in the tool let you compare offers on the same basis, since a vendor quoting reach and frequency is really quoting a price per view once you do the math. One more thing worth weighing: paid impressions cost money every single time the ad serves, while organic impressions from search and AI answers keep compounding for free. For a plan that builds owned impressions you do not rent, request a free SEO audit and we will map it to your goals.
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