As I’m sure you know, AdSense is the publisher side of the Google Ads network. You install AdSense on a site, and you wait while the money rolls in. If you’re lucky, it’ll be dimes rolling down that hill into your pocketbook, not pennies!

Okay, so AdSense has one notable flaw: generally low pay. It’s a PPC network, which is always a low value proposition for all but a few extremely lucrative niches. It relies on people clicking the ads, which in turn relies on having enough traffic to make you meaningful cash. Google also takes their cut - a 32% share, meaning publishers keep 68% of ad revenue.

So how much traffic do you need, exactly, to earn with AdSense?

  • AdSense has no minimum traffic requirement, but sites with 20,000-40,000 monthly pageviews realistically earn only $100-$200/month.
  • Earning $3,000/month requires 300,000-600,000 monthly pageviews at mid-range RPM, making niche selection critically important.
  • High-end niches like finance and legal can achieve $1,000/month with just 40,000 pageviews, versus 500,000 in low-CPC niches.
  • Ad placement, mobile optimization, geographic targeting, and page speed all meaningfully impact CPC and CTR performance.
  • AdSense alone rarely supports full-time income; affiliate marketing is recommended as the best complementary monetization strategy.

Minimum Traffic and AdSense Applications

Person submitting AdSense application online

AdSense is a program open to just about everyone, but there are a few things that will disqualify your site from the program.

  • A site that doesn’t have enough text/content on it to review will be rejected. This typically means sites that are nothing more than a single landing page, sites that have all of their content embedded in videos, and sites that are full of spam and low quality content. There are also some content industries that will get you rejected, like illegal pharmaceuticals.
  • A site that has a design making it virtually unusable. If your design is hard to navigate or read, Google may well reject you.
  • A lack of essential pages can earn you a rejection. Essential pages, as far as Google is concerned, are the privacy policy, the about page, and the contact page. Google loves it when webmasters include these pages, even if they aren’t strictly necessary for something like a basic personal blog.

To successfully apply to AdSense, you’re going to need to verify your Google account and your ownership of the site. Verification via email and name is important, and you will need to verify your age with Google as well.

Google doesn’t like when you pay for traffic outside of legitimate ad networks, and they can reject your application if they think you’re buying bot traffic, which will undermine their network.

One thing that does not disqualify you is using other ad network display ads alongside AdSense. However, excessive ads on a given page will hurt your site in both organic search and user experience. It’s generally a good idea to minimize the number of ads and maximize their quality.

There is no actual traffic minimum to apply to AdSense and be accepted. They don’t have minimum traffic thresholds you need to meet, unlike some other ad networks. That said, if you don’t have a decent amount of traffic, you’re not going to make much money. Sites with 20,000-40,000 monthly pageviews might realistically earn around $100-$200 per month. Why run ads if you’re earning $5 a month?

Faster Approval Times

Speedometer showing fast website approval process

One thing that endlessly frustrates newcomers to the AdSense program is the wait time for approval. When you submit your site for review, Google claims it can take up to a week to get your site reviewed. In actuality, it can take longer, and there’s nothing you can do to speed it up once you’ve submitted. However, you can lay some solid groundwork beforehand to make your site look better and improve your chances of a faster approval.

The first thing you need is a sufficient level of high quality content. You don’t necessarily need a massive amount, but having somewhere around 30-40 blog posts, all of 1,500+ words in length, all unique and packed with value, puts you in a strong position. Just know that anything under 20 posts and anything under 1,000 words is pushing into thin site territory, and Google is less likely to approve a thin site.

You do need to make sure you’re not trying to get AdSense in a niche that doesn’t support it. Health, finance, travel, and other mainstream industries are generally fine. By contrast, you can’t use AdSense on sites that are about adult content, hate groups, copyright infringement, drugs, hacking, violence, and other prohibited topics. You can see the full list over here.

While you’re free to keep third-party ad networks on your site in theory, removing them during the review period is a smart move. They can swing a borderline application in the wrong direction. Consider leaving placeholders and restoring other ads only after you’ve been approved.

Verification with Google services is generally a positive trust factor and can streamline your approval. This means verifying your site with Google Search Console and implementing Google Analytics. Both add additional trust signals that Google looks favorably upon.

Other basic SEO factors are considered here as well. Using a robots.txt file properly is important. Using an XML sitemap is always a good idea. Proper use of meta data is always welcome.

Finally, of course, having a decent amount of traffic is a boon. Google has been known to approve sites with only a small handful of views per day, but sites with more traffic get faster consideration because of the earnings potential they represent for Google. If you’re unsure whether you’re ready, it helps to understand how many hits per day you should have before using AdSense.

The Mathematics of Earnings

AdSense earnings calculation formula on paper

Alright, so how much traffic do you need to make a decent living off of AdSense alone? The first thing you need to do is consider how much money you want to make per month.

$3,000 per month is a reasonable goal to work toward. That works out to roughly $100 per day. To understand what it takes to get there, you need to think in terms of RPM (revenue per thousand pageviews), which is the most practical way to estimate AdSense earnings in 2026.

RPM varies enormously by niche:

  • Low-end niches (entertainment, general lifestyle): $2-$5 RPM
  • Mid-range niches (tech, health, education): $5-$10 RPM
  • High-end niches (finance, legal, insurance, B2B): $20-$50+ RPM

Now you do some math. To earn $100 per day ($3,000/month), here’s what you’d need depending on your RPM:

  • At a $5 RPM, you need approximately 20,000 daily pageviews
  • At a $10 RPM, you need approximately 10,000 daily pageviews
  • At a $20 RPM, you need approximately 5,000 daily pageviews

To put that in monthly terms: a site earning a mid-range $5-$10 RPM would need roughly 300,000-600,000 monthly pageviews to hit $3,000/month from AdSense alone. That’s a significant amount of traffic. For context, a site with just 20,000-40,000 monthly pageviews at a mid-range RPM might realistically earn $100-$200/month - enough to cover a bill or two, but not a living.

Average click-through rates in 2026 sit around 1-2%, and CPCs across most niches are often under $3. Low-CPC niches may require up to 500,000 pageviews to earn $1,000/month, while high-CPC niches like finance or legal could achieve the same with as few as 40,000 pageviews. Niche selection matters enormously.

Now, 300,000+ monthly pageviews sounds excessive when you’re just starting out and getting a handful of visitors per day. But you’re not limited to one blog post. With 400 blog posts each pulling modest organic traffic, the numbers become far more achievable. Some posts will underperform and die off, while others will hit trending topics and bring in far more than average. The volume of quality content you publish is one of the biggest levers you can pull.

There are also tweaks you can make to boost different aspects of this process. You can get more traffic, publish more content, add other monetization routes, and work to increase your RPM through better niche targeting.

Boosting CPC and CTR

Graph showing CPC and CTR growth trends

You can take a lot of different actions to increase your CPC and CTR for your AdSense ads.

  • Position your ads in more visible locations. This helps you avoid banner blindness and allows you to position ads where people are most likely to engage, as measured with heat maps or user behavior tools.
  • Use Auto Ads carefully. Google’s Auto Ads feature uses machine learning to place and optimize ads automatically. Many publishers find it increases revenue, but it’s worth monitoring to ensure it doesn’t hurt user experience.
  • Consider using larger ad formats from AdSense. Avoid ads that are small and tucked out of the way, but don’t let them interrupt content flow so aggressively that users bounce.
  • Try to increase the time a user spends on your site - via internal links and deeper content - to keep people around longer. More time means more ad exposure and more opportunities to click.
  • Look for a niche similar to your own with a higher CPC. Shifting slightly toward finance, legal, or B2B topics within your existing subject area can meaningfully lift your RPM without a total rebrand.
  • Make sure your site is fully optimized for mobile. Mobile traffic accounts for the majority of web traffic in 2026, and serving well-optimized mobile ads is essential to capturing that revenue.
  • Restrict the geographic targeting for your ads, preferably to primarily English-speaking, high-income countries. The USA, UK, Canada, and Australia consistently pay much more per click than most other regions.
  • Improve your Core Web Vitals and page speed. Google’s algorithm and ad auction systems both reward fast, well-structured pages. A slow site doesn’t just hurt SEO - it hurts your ad revenue too.

Another strategy you can use, if you’re careful, is to buy traffic. Google explicitly says that buying traffic is allowable, so long as you’re buying real traffic - not bot traffic intended to defraud Google AdSense. Buying traffic through Meta ads or other legitimate platforms is fine; buying bot traffic from a sketchy Fiverr gig is not. The idea is to get real people to your site, through whatever legitimate means available.

On the flip side, purchased traffic often has a lower CTR than organic traffic, which cuts your effective RPM. You also need to ensure the cost of buying traffic doesn’t outpace what you earn from ads, which is a real risk at low RPM levels.

In general, anything that boosts one of the relevant metrics - traffic volume, click rates, value of individual clicks, or the number of ad impressions - will increase what you’re making over time.

Now, AdSense alone is not a realistic path to a full-time income for most publishers unless you’re operating at significant scale in a high-RPM niche. Even with solid traffic and decent RPM values, you may find yourself earning on par with a part-time job. If you want to build a meaningful income from your site, AdSense should be one piece of a larger monetization strategy. Affiliate marketing is generally the best complement to AdSense - it’s easy to start through programs like Amazon Associates or niche-specific networks, and it scales well with content volume. Beyond that, you can create and sell your own products, offer services, or pursue sponsorships. Where you grow from there is entirely up to you.