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Entry requirements, pricing, and the significant gap in what advertisers can currently measure

Post 3 of 3  ·  Part of the ChatGPT Advertising Series  ·  March 2026

A significant portion of the coverage about ChatGPT advertising focuses on its potential the size of the audience, the novelty of the format, the hypothetical value of reaching users mid-conversation. Much less attention has been paid to the straightforward practical question: what does it cost, what do you get for that cost, and what can you actually measure?

This post answers those questions directly, based on confirmed reporting rather than projections or marketing claims.

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The short answer: large enterprises, by invitation only.

ChatGPT advertising is not a self-serve platform. There is no interface where a business can sign up, set a budget, define an audience, and start running ads. The program is a tightly controlled beta involving fewer than 100 hand-selected brands.[1]

The $200,000 Minimum

Adweek confirmed that OpenAI required early beta participants to commit a minimum of $200,000 in advertising spend to participate.[2] This is the floor, not the average some brands committed significantly more. Reporting from The Information indicated that brands in the earliest wave of testing, before the February 9 public launch, committed $1 million or more.[3]

Companies reported to be among the early participants include Adobe, Target, Albertsons, and the WPP media group.[4] These are organizations with substantial brand recognition, large marketing budgets, and the internal infrastructure to run campaigns on an experimental platform with limited measurement tools. This is not a channel that is currently relevant to small or mid-sized businesses.

ChatGPT ads are priced on a cost-per-thousand-impressions (CPM) model, meaning advertisers pay per view rather than per click. The reported CPM for premium placements is approximately $60 per 1,000 impressions, based on reporting by The Information and cited by Search Engine Journal.[5] OpenAI has not publicly confirmed this figure.

For context, Google’s Display Network typically runs $3–10 CPM. Meta advertising averages $15–20 CPM. Google Search generally considered the most premium intent-based ad inventory runs at an effective CPM of around $38 when calculated from average CPC.[5] At $60 CPM, ChatGPT ads are positioned as the most expensive standard digital ad placement available.

Whether that price is justified is genuinely unknown, because the data needed to evaluate it click-through rates, conversion rates, customer acquisition costs does not yet exist in any independently verified form. The case for the premium price is that conversational intent is more valuable than keyword intent. That may be true. It is not yet demonstrated.

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This is the section of the ChatGPT advertising story that receives the least attention, and arguably deserves the most.

Current Reporting: Weekly CSV Files

Early beta advertisers receive weekly CSV export files containing two data points: impression counts and click counts.[6] That is the entirety of the native reporting currently available from the platform.

There are no real-time dashboards. There is no built-in attribution. There is no A/B testing infrastructure. There is no ability to see which conversation topics generated impressions, which types of queries led to clicks, or what happened after a user clicked. There is no conversion tracking.

Attribution the ability to trace a sale, a sign-up, or any business outcome back to a specific advertising exposure is the foundation of performance marketing. Without it, an advertiser cannot determine whether their spend generated any return.

ChatGPT’s current reporting makes attribution nearly impossible through the platform’s own tools. Advertisers who want to understand downstream impact must build their own tracking infrastructure using UTM parameters, GA4 configurations, and third-party tools which adds cost and complexity, and still cannot measure what happens inside the ChatGPT session itself. The gap between ad exposure and what a user does next is not currently bridgeable with available tools.

The comparison between ChatGPT’s CPM model and Google Search’s CPC model is worth understanding clearly, because they represent fundamentally different financial structures.

  • Google Search Ads (CPC): You pay when a user clicks. If no one clicks, you pay nothing. This means the advertiser and the platform share some alignment Google benefits from showing ads users find relevant enough to engage with.
  • ChatGPT Ads (CPM): You pay per impression, regardless of whether anyone clicks or takes any action. If an ad is shown 1,000 times and no one clicks, the advertiser has still paid ~$60. The platform’s revenue is not contingent on the ad performing.

This distinction matters particularly in a context where click-through rates are unknown. On a new platform with no published benchmarks and limited reporting, an advertiser on a CPM model is paying for exposure without any current ability to evaluate whether that exposure is converting into anything meaningful.

  • Access is invitation-only; fewer than 100 brands are in the current beta
  • Minimum spend: $200,000 confirmed; some early brands committed $1 million or more
  • Pricing: ~$60 CPM (reported by The Information; not publicly confirmed by OpenAI)
  • For comparison: Google Display ~$3–10 CPM, Meta ~$15–20 CPM, Google Search ~$38 effective CPM
  • Reporting: weekly CSV files with impression and click counts only
  • No real-time dashboards, no attribution tools, no conversion tracking, no A/B testing
  • No independent performance benchmarks exist as of March 2026
  • Self-serve access is expected later in 2026 but has not launched

[1]  Storyboard18. “ChatGPT Ads Enter Limited Beta with $200,000 Minimum Spend.” Feb 2, 2026.  https://www.storyboard18.com/digital/chatgpt-ads-enter-limited-beta-with-200000-minimum-spend-88645.htm

[2]  Adweek / OpenAI. “OpenAI Confirms $200K Minimum Commitment for ChatGPT Ad Beta.” Jan 29, 2026.  https://www.adweek.com

[3]  The Information / MediaPost. “Beta Brands Begin Testing ChatGPT Ads, Budgets = $1M Each.” Jan 21, 2026.  https://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/412189/beta-brands-begin-testing-chatgpt-ads-budgets.html

[4]  The Next Web. “The Other Side of Ads in ChatGPT: Advertiser Perspective.” Mar 2026.  https://thenextweb.com/news/the-other-side-of-ads-in-chatgpt-advertiser-perspective

[5]  Search Engine Journal. “PPC Pulse: ChatGPT Ads CPMs, Ads Decoded Talks Analytics.” Feb 6, 2026.  https://www.searchenginejournal.com/ppc-pulse-chatgpt-ads-cpms-ads-decoded-talks-analytics/566190/

[6]  ALM Corp. “ChatGPT’s Ads Manager: What OpenAI’s $200K Entry Bar Means for Marketers.” Mar 2026.  https://almcorp.com/blog/chatgpt-ads-manager-openai-advertising-platform-2026/

[7]  eMarketer. “ChatGPT $200K Minimums for Ad Beta Signals OpenAI’s Push to Monetize Scale.” Feb 2, 2026.  https://www.emarketer.com/content/chatgpt–200k-minimums-ad-beta-signals-openai-s-push-monetize-scale

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