Gross Rating Points Calculator

Measure campaign pressure across channels with flexible inputs, assumptions, and exports. Visualize results in seconds. Plan smarter media buys with clearer performance insights today.

Calculator Inputs

Use one complete input path, or enter multiple paths to compare consistency. Percentages should be entered as whole numbers, not decimals.

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Example Data Table

Scenario Population Reach % Frequency Impressions Spots Avg Rating GRP
Brand Awareness Launch 500,000 62 4.2 1,302,000 260.40
Digital Video Push 750,000 1,500,000 200.00
Regional TV Burst 18 12.5 225.00

Formula Used

1) Core GRP Formula

GRP = Reach (%) × Average Frequency

Use this when you know how much of the audience was reached and how many times they were exposed.

2) Impression-Based Formula

GRP = (Impressions ÷ Target Population) × 100

Use this for digital, streaming, or mixed media plans where impression totals are known.

3) Spot Rating Formula

GRP = Average Rating per Spot × Number of Spots

Use this for traditional media schedules with ratings per insertion or per airing.

4) Supporting Efficiency Formulas

Cost per GRP = Budget ÷ GRP

CPM = (Budget ÷ Impressions) × 1,000

Minimum Effective GRPs = Effective Reach (%) × Frequency Threshold

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Select a calculation mode, or leave it on Auto Detect.
  2. Enter one complete input set such as reach and frequency, impressions and population, or average rating and spots.
  3. Add optional planning fields like budget, GRP goal, and effective reach assumptions.
  4. Click Calculate GRP to show the result below the header and above the form.
  5. Review the summary table, method comparison, and chart to validate your plan.
  6. Use the CSV or PDF buttons to export the output for reporting or media planning review.

FAQs

1) What does GRP measure?

GRP measures total advertising weight delivered against a target audience. It combines reach and frequency into one planning number for campaign pressure.

2) Is a higher GRP always better?

Not always. Higher GRPs can increase exposure, but weak targeting or oversaturation may waste budget. Efficiency and audience fit still matter.

3) Can digital campaigns use GRP?

Yes. Digital campaigns often estimate GRP from impressions and target population. This makes GRP useful for cross-channel planning and reporting.

4) What is the difference between reach and GRP?

Reach shows how much of the audience saw the campaign at least once. GRP adds frequency, so it reflects total delivery pressure.

5) Why does the calculator compare multiple methods?

Method comparison helps spot input conflicts. If estimates differ too much, your audience size, ratings, or impression assumptions may need review.

6) What is cost per GRP used for?

Cost per GRP shows how much budget is needed for each rating point delivered. It helps compare media efficiency across channels or vendors.

7) What are effective GRPs?

Effective GRPs estimate the pressure required to reach enough people at a useful frequency threshold. They support planning beyond raw delivery totals.

8) Should I use decimals or percentages in the form?

Enter percentages as whole numbers such as 62 for 62%. Enter frequency, rating, and budget values as standard numeric amounts.

Related Calculators

effective reach calculatorreach percentage calculatorreach curve calculatorcost per rating point

Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.