User Acquisition

Banner Ad

Also known asBannerDisplay BannerMobile Banner

A small persistent ad shown at the top or bottom of the app screen — the lowest-attention and lowest-eCPM mobile ad format, but high in impression volume.

Key takeaways

  1. 01Banner = small persistent ad at top or bottom of screen. Always visible, low-attention, low-eCPM.
  2. 02eCPM: US iOS $0.50-2, US Android $0.30-1.50, India / Brazil Android $0.10-0.50 — by far the lowest format.
  3. 03High volume can still make sense — many banner impressions per session multiply low eCPM into meaningful revenue at scale.
  4. 04Decline trend: many publishers replace banners with less-frequent but higher-eCPM interstitials or rewarded video.

A banner ad is the small, persistent ad shown at the top or bottom of a mobile app's screen. Banners are always visible — they don't interrupt user flow, they don't take over the screen, they just occupy a strip of pixels. This persistence is both their strength (continuous impression volume, no user disruption) and their weakness (low attention, low brand recall, low eCPM).

Banner eCPM is the lowest of all mobile ad formats (2026 anchors):

  • US iOS: $0.50-2.
  • US Android: $0.30-1.50.
  • Western Europe: similar to US, slightly lower.
  • India / Brazil Android: $0.10-0.50.

Compared to interstitials ($5-15) or rewarded video ($10-25), banner eCPM is 5-50× lower. The trade-off is volume: a banner can serve hundreds of impressions per session per user, while interstitials serve 3-5 and rewarded video serves whatever the user opts into.

When banners still make sense

When to drop banners

The broader 2026 trend: publishers are replacing banner inventory with fewer but higher-eCPM formats. A single rewarded video impression often beats 30 banner impressions on the same user-session economics.

Technical considerations

  • Refresh rate: banners refresh every 30-60 seconds (configurable). Faster refresh = more impressions but lower per-impression engagement; slower = vice versa.
  • Anchoring: bottom banners typically outperform top banners on engagement (less visual conflict with primary content).
  • Adaptive sizing: modern banner formats adapt to device width; older fixed-size banners (320×50) get progressively smaller on larger phones / tablets.
  • Smart banner / native banner formats: hybrid banner formats that look more like native UI — typically 2-3× the eCPM of standard banners.

Quick answers

What is a banner ad in a mobile app?

A banner ad is a small persistent ad shown at the top or bottom of a mobile app's screen. Always visible, doesn't take over the screen, low-attention format. eCPM typically $0.50-2 on US iOS — the lowest of all mobile ad formats but compensated by high impression volume (dozens per session).

Are banner ads still worth it in 2026?

Depends on the app. **Yes** for utility / productivity apps with long sessions, content browsing apps, casual games with long active play, or apps where interstitial / rewarded placement is awkward. **No** for premium consumer apps where banner ads compromise brand experience, short-session apps where volume can't compensate for low eCPM, or subscription-monetized apps where banners conflict with the "pay to remove ads" value prop.

What is a typical banner ad eCPM?

2026 anchors: US iOS $0.50-2, US Android $0.30-1.50, India / Brazil Android $0.10-0.50. Western Europe similar to US, slightly lower. Smart banner / native banner formats typically clear 2-3× the eCPM of standard banners because they look more native. Compare to interstitial ($5-15) or rewarded video ($10-25) — banner is 5-50× lower.

How often should banner ads refresh?

Most platforms default to 30-60 second refresh. Faster refresh (15-30s) generates more impressions but per-impression engagement drops. Slower refresh (60-90s) sees fewer impressions but better engagement per. Sweet spot for most apps is 30-45 seconds. Always test the trade-off — total banner revenue × user retention is the right metric, not raw impression count.

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