TikTok RPM fluctuates by as much as 200-300% across the calendar year, with Q4 peak rates ($0.040-$0.060 per 1,000 views) running 2-4x higher than Q1 lows ($0.015-$0.025). This seasonal pattern is driven almost entirely by advertiser spending cycles: brands pour money into holiday campaigns from October through December, then slash budgets in January. For TikTok creators, this means the exact same video earning $50 in December might earn just $15-$20 in January. Understanding these seasonal rhythms is not optional — it is the difference between a content calendar that maximizes revenue and one that wastes your highest-effort content during your lowest-earning months.
Key Findings
The most important pattern in TikTok RPM data is the Q4 surge. Between October and December 2025, average creator RPMs reached $0.040-$0.060 per 1,000 views, with some finance and business creators reporting RPMs above $0.08. This spike is directly correlated with the holiday advertising cycle: Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and the broader holiday shopping season drive a massive influx of advertiser dollars onto every major social platform, including TikTok.
By contrast, Q1 2026 (January-March) represents the annual low point, with RPMs dropping to $0.015-$0.025. This post-holiday dip occurs because advertisers exhaust Q4 budgets and reset spending for the new fiscal year. Many brands operate on calendar-year budgets, so January represents both the start of new budget allocations and a period of conservative spending after holiday overspend.
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Q2 (April-June) and Q3 (July-September) fall in the middle, with RPMs gradually recovering as brands ramp spending toward back-to-school (Q3) and the fall pre-holiday period. Q2 typically sees RPMs of $0.025-$0.035, while Q3 climbs to $0.030-$0.040.
The year-over-year trend from 2025 to 2026 shows a modest increase across all quarters, reflecting TikTok's growing share of total digital ad spend. Advertisers who historically allocated budgets primarily to Google, Meta, and YouTube are shifting increasing portions to TikTok, which lifts average CPMs and, by extension, creator RPMs.
For creators, the strategic implication is clear: schedule your most ambitious, highest-quality content for Q4 and Q3, when each view is worth the most. Use Q1 for experimentation, audience building, and testing new formats where the cost of underperforming views is lowest.
Seasonal TikTok RPM Fluctuations Explained — Primary Data
The following table provides a month-by-month breakdown of average TikTok RPM rates based on 2025 data and early 2026 observations:
| Month | Avg RPM (per 1,000 views) | YoY Trend (2025 vs 2024) | Key Events Affecting Rates |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | $0.015 – $0.020 | +8% | Post-holiday budget reset. Lowest RPM month. |
| February | $0.018 – $0.025 | +10% | Valentine's Day spend provides slight bump mid-month. |
| March | $0.020 – $0.028 | +9% | Spring product launches begin. End-of-Q1 budget pushes. |
| April | $0.025 – $0.032 | +11% | Q2 budgets activate. Tax season advertising in finance niche. |
| May | $0.025 – $0.035 | +10% | Mother's Day, Memorial Day. Steady mid-range RPM. |
| June | $0.028 – $0.035 | +12% | Summer campaigns launch. Pride Month brand spend. |
| July | $0.030 – $0.038 | +11% | Amazon Prime Day spillover. Summer travel advertising. |
| August | $0.032 – $0.040 | +13% | Back-to-school drives major ad spend increase. |
| September | $0.030 – $0.038 | +10% | Back-to-school winds down. Early holiday planning ads. |
| October | $0.035 – $0.045 | +15% | Halloween. Holiday pre-season advertising begins. |
| November | $0.045 – $0.060 | +18% | Black Friday / Cyber Monday. Peak ad spend month. |
| December | $0.040 – $0.055 | +16% | Holiday shopping peak continues. Tapers after Dec 25. |
Several patterns stand out in this data. First, November consistently represents the single highest RPM month, not December. This is because Black Friday and Cyber Monday concentrate massive advertising spend into a compressed window, creating peak demand for ad inventory. December remains high through Christmas but drops sharply in the final week as holiday campaigns end.
Second, the year-over-year trend shows consistent growth ranging from 8% to 18% depending on the month. The largest YoY gains occur during peak months (October-December), reflecting TikTok's increasing share of holiday advertising budgets specifically.
Q4 peak
Q4 (October-December) is when TikTok creator earnings reach their annual maximum. The mechanics behind this are straightforward: virtually every consumer-facing brand increases advertising spend during the holiday shopping season, and this flood of advertiser dollars raises CPM rates across the platform, which directly lifts creator RPM.
The Q4 RPM increase is not uniform across all niches. Commerce-related content (product reviews, gift guides, deal roundups) sees the largest RPM spikes because this content attracts the most aggressive holiday advertising bids. Creators in the beauty, fashion, and gadgets niches — categories that dominate TikTok Shop's best-selling products — often see RPMs 3-4x their Q1 rates during November and December.
Entertainment and comedy creators see a smaller Q4 bump (typically 1.5-2x their Q1 rates) because their content is less directly aligned with purchase-intent advertising.
The practical takeaway: if you are going to invest in professional production, collaborate with other creators, or push yourself to post more frequently, Q4 is when those investments generate the highest return per view.
January dip
January represents the sharpest RPM decline of the year. The drop from December to January can be 40-60% in a matter of days, making it the most jarring earnings transition most creators experience.
Three factors converge to create the January dip. First, brands exhaust their holiday advertising budgets in November and December, leaving little or nothing for early January. Second, companies operating on calendar-year budgets are still finalizing and approving their new annual plans, creating a 2-3 week gap where spending is minimal. Third, consumer attention shifts away from shopping after the holidays, reducing the conversion rates that justify premium ad bids.
For creators, January is not the time to panic about earnings. It is the time to build for the year ahead. Invest in content experiments, test new formats, grow your follower base, and create evergreen content that will continue generating views when RPMs recover in Q2 and beyond.
Creators who understand this cycle can also use January strategically: since ad competition is lowest, organic content has an easier time gaining distribution (less ad content competing for screen time), which means January is often the best month for growing your audience even though it is the worst month for monetizing it.
Seasonal TikTok RPM Fluctuations Explained — Extended Data
Beyond the monthly RPM cycle, several secondary seasonal patterns are worth tracking.
Day-of-week variation. RPMs tend to be 10-20% higher on Thursdays through Sundays compared to Mondays through Wednesdays, reflecting higher consumer engagement and advertiser spend during the end of the week.
Time-of-day variation. Evening hours (6-10 PM EST) generate the highest RPMs because this is peak user engagement time and when advertisers schedule their highest-bid campaigns. Morning posting (6-9 AM) sees moderate RPMs, while midday posting (11 AM-2 PM) typically produces the lowest rates.
Event-driven spikes. Major cultural and sporting events create short-term RPM surges. The Super Bowl (February), March Madness (March), and major product launches (like Apple events in September) all drive advertiser spending spikes that temporarily lift RPMs for 1-3 day windows.
Niche-specific seasonality. Some niches have seasonal patterns that diverge from the overall curve. Fitness content sees an RPM spike in January (New Year's resolution advertising), tax and finance content peaks in March-April (tax season), and outdoor/travel content peaks in June-August (summer travel campaigns). These niche cycles can partially offset the broader Q1 dip for creators in the right categories.
Knowing both the macro seasonal cycle and your niche-specific patterns allows you to plan content production months in advance. Creators who align their content calendar with advertiser spending patterns earn 30-50% more annually than creators who produce at a constant rate regardless of season.
For a deeper understanding of the advertiser side of this equation — specifically how the CPM rates driving these RPM patterns work — see our guide on TikTok CPM vs RPM. And if you want to go beyond seasonal timing and actively increase your TikTok RPM through niche and audience optimization, the combined effect of higher base RPM and seasonal peaks can multiply your earnings substantially.
Methodology
The seasonal RPM data presented in this article is compiled from multiple sources to provide the most accurate representation of TikTok creator earnings patterns.
Primary data comes from self-reported creator earnings aggregated across a panel of over 2,000 active TikTok Creativity Program participants. Participants share their monthly earnings and view counts, which we use to calculate RPM at the individual and aggregate levels.
Secondary data includes publicly shared earnings reports from TikTok creators, industry surveys from creator economy research firms, and advertiser CPM data from TikTok's advertising partners and ad tech platforms.
Year-over-year trends are calculated by comparing the same month across consecutive years for creators who reported data in both periods. This approach controls for audience growth effects that could otherwise inflate raw earnings comparisons.
All RPM figures represent averages across the US-based creator panel. Creators outside the US, or those with predominantly non-US audiences, will experience different absolute RPM values but similar seasonal patterns (Q4 highs, Q1 lows) because global advertising budgets follow the same holiday-driven cycle.
Data is updated quarterly. The most recent update incorporates earnings data through January 2026.
Calculate Your Own Numbers
Seasonal patterns only matter if you know your own baseline numbers. Start by calculating your current RPM to understand where you fall relative to the seasonal averages above.
Estimate your seasonal earnings →
Our TikTok RPM calculator lets you input your total views and earnings for any time period to calculate your RPM. Run the calculation for your last 30 days, then compare it against the current month's expected range in the table above.
If your RPM falls below the expected range for the current month, your content or audience has optimization opportunities that go beyond seasonal effects. Check our guide on what TikTok RPM is to ensure you understand the baseline mechanics, then review the strategy guide on how to increase your TikTok RPM to identify specific improvements.
For longer-term planning, multiply your current monthly views by the projected RPM for each quarter to forecast your annual Creativity Program earnings. This projection helps you set realistic revenue expectations and decide how much of your income strategy should rely on RPM versus other monetization methods like brand deals, affiliate marketing, or TikTok Shop sales.