YouTube Ads Cost in Singapore: What You'll Actually Pay
- Nigel

- 7 days ago
- 19 min read
Ask five different agencies how much YouTube ads cost in Singapore and you will get five different answers. One quotes you "from $500 a month", another insists you need $10,000 before it is worth starting, and a third gives you a vague "it depends" and a proposal full of jargon. If you run a Singapore SME and you have been trying to get a straight answer on YouTube advertising costs, that confusion is exactly why we wrote this guide.
The honest answer is that YouTube ads in Singapore are one of the cheapest ways to put your business in front of thousands of local viewers — often costing less per view than a single MRT ride costs per stop. But the gap between businesses that profit from YouTube ads and businesses that burn money on them comes down to understanding what you are actually paying for, which ad formats fit your goal, and what realistic numbers look like at each budget level.
As Google Ads Certified specialists who have managed more than $2M in annual ad spend for Singapore businesses, we see the real invoices, the real cost-per-view figures, and the real results across dozens of local accounts every month. In this guide, we will break down exactly what YouTube ads cost in Singapore in 2026 — by format, by industry, and by budget level — with no fluff and no inflated agency math.
What Are YouTube Ads?
YouTube ads are paid video placements that appear before, during, or alongside YouTube videos. When you watch a cooking video and a 15-second clip for a local renovation firm plays first, that is a YouTube ad. When you scroll the YouTube homepage and see a promoted video thumbnail from a tuition centre, that is also a YouTube ad.
Here is the part many business owners do not realise: you do not buy YouTube ads from YouTube. You buy them through Google Ads, the same platform that runs the text ads you see on Google search results. YouTube is owned by Google, and your video campaigns sit inside the same account, share the same billing, and use much of the same targeting data.
Think of it like renting a billboard, except the billboard knows who is looking at it. Instead of paying for a static sign along the CTE that everyone drives past, you pay only when someone in your chosen audience — say, homeowners aged 30 to 45 in the East — actually watches your video. That is the fundamental shift: YouTube ads are priced on attention, not on placement.
One more definition before we go further, because it matters for cost. A view on YouTube ads means someone watched at least 30 seconds of your ad (or the whole ad, if it is shorter than 30 seconds), or clicked on it. If they skip after 5 seconds, you pay nothing for most formats. This "pay for genuine attention" model is why YouTube remains one of the most cost-efficient channels in Singapore.
Why does this matter for a Singapore business specifically? Reach. YouTube reaches the overwhelming majority of online adults in Singapore every month, across every age band that spends money — it is not a youth platform the way TikTok still skews, and it is not declining the way some social feeds are. Your customers are watching home tours, hawker reviews, parenting channels, golf tutorials and finance explainers, often on the biggest screen in their home. Few advertising channels in Singapore put a local SME in front of that breadth of audience for under ten cents a view.
It also matters that the targeting runs on Google's data rather than a social network's. You can reach people by what they recently searched on Google ("aircon servicing price"), by the websites they visit, by life events like moving house or getting married, and by custom audiences built around your competitors' customers. For a service business, being able to show a video to people who searched for your service category in the past two weeks is about as close to reading minds as advertising legally gets.
How YouTube Ad Pricing Works
YouTube ads run on an auction. Every time a viewer is about to see an ad slot, Google runs a near-instant auction between all the advertisers who want to reach that viewer. Your bid, your ad quality, and your targeting determine whether you win the slot and what you pay. You never pay more than is needed to beat the next advertiser below you — which means actual costs are usually lower than your maximum bid.
There are two main pricing models you will encounter:
CPV (cost per view): you pay each time someone watches 30 seconds of your ad, watches it to the end, or interacts with it. In Singapore, typical CPVs run between SGD 0.05 and SGD 0.15 for well-targeted campaigns.
CPM (cost per thousand impressions): you pay per 1,000 times your ad is shown, regardless of how long people watch. Non-skippable and bumper ads are sold this way. Singapore CPMs typically run between SGD 6 and SGD 16 depending on audience and season.
Let us make that concrete with a worked example. Say you run a furniture showroom in Tiong Bahru and you launch a skippable in-stream campaign with a SGD 1,500 monthly budget. At an average CPV of SGD 0.09, that budget buys you roughly 16,600 completed views from people in your target audience each month. If 4% of those viewers visit your website — about 660 people — and 3% of those visitors enquire, you have generated around 20 enquiries. If your average sofa sale is worth SGD 2,800 and you close 1 in 4 enquiries, that is roughly SGD 14,000 in revenue from SGD 1,500 in spend.
The numbers scale up and down with budget, but the mechanics stay the same: budget ÷ CPV = views, then your website and sales process determine how many views become customers. This is also why tracking matters so much — without conversion tracking set up properly, you can see views and clicks but you cannot see which campaigns actually produce enquiries, so you cannot optimise toward revenue.
YouTube Ads Cost in Singapore: The Full Breakdown
Your total YouTube advertising cost has three components: media spend (what you pay Google), production cost (making the video), and management cost (your time or an agency's). Most "how much do YouTube ads cost" articles only talk about the first one. Here is all three, with real Singapore figures.
1. Media spend — what you pay Google
These are the typical 2026 ranges we see across Singapore accounts:
Skippable in-stream ads: SGD 0.05–0.15 per view. The workhorse format. Viewers can skip after 5 seconds; you pay only for 30-second views or interactions.
Non-skippable in-stream ads (15 seconds): SGD 9–16 CPM. Guaranteed full exposure, priced accordingly.
Bumper ads (6 seconds): SGD 5–9 CPM. Short, unskippable, excellent for staying top-of-mind cheaply.
In-feed video ads: SGD 0.08–0.30 per click. These appear in search results and the home feed; you pay when someone clicks to watch.
YouTube Shorts ads: SGD 4–8 CPM. The newest and currently cheapest inventory, shown between Shorts videos.
Competitive industries pay more. A legal services firm targeting "divorce lawyer" audiences will pay CPVs near the top of the range, while a home bakery targeting broad food interests will pay near the bottom. Seasonality matters too: CPMs across Singapore rise 20–35% in November and December as e-commerce advertisers flood the auction before Christmas, and dip in February after Chinese New Year.
2. Production cost — making the video
You do not need a television commercial. Some of the best-performing YouTube ads we run for Singapore SMEs were shot on a phone with good lighting and a SGD 40 lavalier microphone. That said, here are the realistic tiers:
DIY smartphone video: SGD 0–200 (your time, basic props, maybe a microphone)
Freelance videographer: SGD 800–2,500 for a half-day shoot with editing
Professional production: SGD 3,000–12,000 for scripted, multi-location shoots with motion graphics
If you plan to run ads consistently, investing in a small batch of videos — one main 30-second ad, two 15-second cuts, and one 6-second bumper — gives you enough creative variety to fight ad fatigue without re-shooting every month. A social media video production partner can usually deliver that full batch from a single shoot day.
3. Management cost — running the campaigns
If you manage campaigns yourself, the cost is your time: realistically 4–8 hours a month once campaigns are stable, more during setup. If you hire an agency, Singapore management fees for video campaigns typically run SGD 500–1,500 per month for SME budgets, either as a flat fee or 15–20% of ad spend. A good SEM agency in Singapore will bundle YouTube management with your search campaigns, since both live in the same Google Ads account and share conversion data.
What does a realistic starting budget look like?
For most Singapore SMEs, we recommend starting with SGD 1,000–2,000 per month in media spend. Below SGD 800, campaigns gather data too slowly to optimise properly — you end up making decisions on a handful of conversions, which is statistically meaningless. Above SGD 2,000, scale up only after your cost per enquiry has stabilised. For a deeper look at setting budgets across paid channels, our guide to pay-per-click budget planning walks through the math step by step.
What different budget levels actually buy you
To make the ranges above concrete, here is what three common Singapore SME budget levels typically deliver in practice, assuming skippable in-stream ads at a mid-range CPV of SGD 0.09 and a reasonably converting website.
SGD 1,000 per month. Roughly 11,000 completed views from your target audience. This is a genuine testing budget: enough to learn your real CPV, identify which audiences watch past 30 seconds, and generate a first batch of enquiries — typically 8–15 for a local service business with decent landing pages. What it will not do is dominate your category or produce statistically bulletproof conversion data in the first month. Treat it as paying for information.
SGD 2,500 per month. Roughly 27,000 completed views, which is enough to split budget across two or three audience segments and run a proper retargeting layer with bumper ads. At this level, most of our SME accounts settle into a steady 20–45 enquiries per month by the end of the first quarter, and the account generates enough conversion data for Google's automated bidding to work properly. This is the level where YouTube stops being an experiment and becomes a channel.
SGD 5,000+ per month. Now you are buying market position. At 55,000+ monthly views you can sustain always-on prospecting, sequential retargeting (a 30-second story ad followed by 6-second reminders), and seasonal pushes around your peak months. Businesses at this level should negotiate creative refreshes quarterly, because ad fatigue — not auction prices — becomes the main cost driver once frequency builds.
How to Lower Your YouTube Ads Cost in Singapore
Whatever your budget, these are the levers that consistently bring costs down across the Singapore accounts we manage. None of them require spending more — they require structure.
Fix the first three seconds. Google charges less per view when more people choose to keep watching, because engaging ads earn better auction prices. Moving the hook — the problem, the bold claim, the before/after — into the opening seconds routinely lifts view rates from under 20% to over 30%, and CPVs fall in step. This is the single highest-leverage change for most accounts.
Tighten geography before anything else. If customers will not travel from Woodlands to your Bukit Timah studio, do not pay to reach Woodlands. A 6–10km radius around your physical location, layered with age and interest targeting, removes the largest block of wasted spend in most local-business accounts. Island-wide targeting is only rational for e-commerce and B2B.
Exclude what does not convert, weekly. The audience and placement reports tell you exactly who watches without ever clicking and which channels burn budget — kids' content channels are a notorious one for Singapore advertisers. Fifteen minutes of exclusions every week compounds into 20–30% efficiency gains over a quarter.
Use frequency caps on awareness campaigns. Showing the same person your ad 12 times a week does not make them 12 times more likely to buy; it inflates spend and breeds annoyance. Cap CPM-bought formats at 3–5 impressions per person per week and let bumper retargeting carry the repetition job at a fraction of the cost.
Match the bidding strategy to your data maturity. New accounts should bid manually on CPV until conversion tracking has recorded a few dozen enquiries; only then hand the keys to conversion-based automated bidding. Automation without data is just expensive guessing.
Recycle one shoot into many ads. A single half-day shoot can yield one 30-second hero ad, three 15-second cuts and two 6-second bumpers. Rotating five creatives instead of running one ad until it dies keeps view rates — and therefore prices — healthy for months.
Time your pushes around the auction, not just your calendar. CPMs spike in November–December and soften in February and through the mid-year lull. If your business is not seasonal, shifting your heaviest spend into the cheap months buys the same attention for 20–30% less.
YouTube Ad Formats Compared
Here is how the five main formats stack up for Singapore advertisers:
Skippable in-stream
Where it shows: Before/during videos, skippable after 5s
Pricing model: CPV
Typical SG cost: SGD 0.05–0.15 per view
Best use case: Lead generation and product demos where you want engaged viewers only
Non-skippable in-stream
Where it shows: Before/during videos, 15s max, cannot skip
Pricing model: CPM
Typical SG cost: SGD 9–16 per 1,000 impressions
Best use case: Brand launches where full message delivery matters
Bumper
Where it shows: Before videos, 6s, cannot skip
Pricing model: CPM
Typical SG cost: SGD 5–9 per 1,000 impressions
Best use case: Cheap top-of-mind reminders and retargeting warm audiences
In-feed video
Where it shows: YouTube search results and home feed
Pricing model: Cost per click
Typical SG cost: SGD 0.08–0.30 per click
Best use case: Reaching people actively searching for your topic
Shorts ads
Where it shows: Between Shorts in the vertical feed
Pricing model: CPM
Typical SG cost: SGD 4–8 per 1,000 impressions
Best use case: Reaching under-35 audiences at the lowest cost in 2026
If you are weighing YouTube against other Google formats entirely, our comparison of Search vs Display vs YouTube ads covers when video beats text and when it does not.
Common Mistakes Singapore Businesses Make With YouTube Ads
Mistake 1: Treating YouTube like a TV channel. Businesses upload their 60-second corporate video, run it as a skippable ad, and wonder why 92% of viewers skip at second five. YouTube viewers decide in the first 3 seconds whether to keep watching. The fix: put your hook — the problem, the offer, or the surprising claim — in the first 3 seconds, and mention your brand before the skip button appears. Ads restructured this way routinely double their view-through rates, which directly lowers your CPV because Google rewards engaging ads with cheaper auction prices.
Mistake 2: Targeting all of Singapore with one campaign. Singapore is small, but intent is not evenly distributed. A renovation firm in Tampines paying the same CPV for viewers in Jurong East — 45 minutes away — as for viewers 10 minutes from their showroom is overpaying for the wrong audience. The fix: layer location, age, and interest targeting, then check the audience reports weekly and exclude segments that watch but never click. We have seen this single change cut cost per enquiry by 30–40% in the first month.
Mistake 3: Running ads with no conversion tracking. Roughly half the self-managed accounts we audit have no conversion tracking at all — the business is paying for views with no idea which campaigns produce enquiries. That makes optimisation guesswork and wastes typically 25–40% of budget on audiences that never convert. The fix is a proper tracking setup before spending a dollar; if your CPCs elsewhere are also climbing, our piece on why your CPC is high explains how poor account structure quietly inflates every cost.
Mistake 4: Giving up after two weeks. Video campaigns need 2–4 weeks of data before Google's bidding systems learn who actually converts. Businesses that panic and pause campaigns at day 10 reset that learning every time, permanently stuck in the expensive early phase. The fix: commit to a 6-week test with a fixed budget, make changes weekly rather than daily, and judge results on the final 3 weeks, not the first 3.
Mistake 5: Using the wrong bidding strategy for the goal. Running a "maximise conversions" bid strategy on a brand-new account with zero conversion history forces Google to guess, and it guesses expensively. Awareness goals should bid on CPV or CPM; lead generation should move to conversion bidding only after tracking has recorded 20–30 conversions. Our guide on how to choose bid strategies maps each strategy to the right account stage.
Mistake 6: Sending video traffic to the homepage. A viewer who clicks your ad about bathroom renovation packages and lands on a generic homepage with twelve menu items will leave within seconds — and you paid for that visit. Every campaign should land on a page that continues the exact conversation the ad started, with one clear action to take. Accounts that switch from homepage landings to dedicated pages typically see conversion rates double, which halves the effective cost of every enquiry without touching the ad settings.
Quick Reference: YouTube Ads Cost by Industry
Costs vary more by industry than by any other factor, because the auction prices attention based on how valuable your audience is to every other advertiser bidding for it. Here is what realistic targets look like across the six industries that ask us about YouTube most often.
Education and enrichment
Best approach: skippable in-stream ads targeting parents by age and location, with bumper retargeting before enrolment seasons. Realistic target: SGD 25–60 cost per enquiry, CPV around SGD 0.07–0.11. Why it works: parents research extensively on YouTube, and a 30-second clip of an actual class builds more trust than any brochure.
Renovation and home services
Best approach: before/after transformation videos as skippable in-stream, geo-targeted to a 5–8km radius around your showroom. Realistic target: SGD 40–90 cost per enquiry. Why it works: renovation is visual and high-consideration — homeowners binge transformation content for months before committing, and showing up repeatedly during that research window wins the shortlist.
E-commerce and retail
Best approach: Shorts ads and skippable in-stream feeding a retargeting funnel, with product demo creative. Realistic target: ROAS of 2.5–4x once the funnel matures, CPMs of SGD 4–8 on Shorts. Why it works: cheap Shorts inventory lets you fill the top of the funnel at scale, then cheaper bumper retargeting converts the warm traffic.
Medical, dental and aesthetics
Best approach: educational explainer ads (what to expect from a procedure) as skippable in-stream, carefully worded to comply with healthcare advertising rules in Singapore. Realistic target: SGD 60–150 cost per booking depending on treatment value. Why it works: patients fear the unknown — a calm, factual walkthrough from an actual practitioner converts far better than discount messaging, which is restricted anyway.
B2B and professional services
Best approach: in-feed video ads on industry search terms plus skippable in-stream targeting custom audiences built from competitor and trade-publication interest. Realistic target: SGD 80–200 per qualified lead. Why it works: decision-makers are on YouTube during research, and video positions your firm as the expert before the RFQ stage.
F&B and hospitality
Best approach: 6-second bumper blitzes around lunch and dinner hours, geo-targeted near your outlets. Realistic target: CPM under SGD 8, measured by footfall lift and branded search growth. Why it works: food is impulse-driven — a mouth-watering 6 seconds at 11.45am does more than a long ad at midnight.
When YouTube Ads Make Sense — and When to Hold Off
YouTube ads are not for everyone, and an honest agency will tell you that before taking your money. Here is the readiness checklist we use with our own clients.
YouTube ads make sense for you if:
You can commit at least SGD 1,000 per month in media spend for at least 3 months
Your product or service benefits from being shown, not just described — transformations, demos, faces, places
You have (or can make) at least one decent 15–30 second video
Your website can convert visitors — clear offer, fast loading, working enquiry form
You have conversion tracking installed, or are willing to set it up first
Hold off — and fix these first — if:
Your website takes more than 4 seconds to load on mobile, or your enquiry form is broken. Paying to send traffic to a leaking bucket is the most expensive mistake in digital marketing.
You need leads this week. Video campaigns need 2–4 weeks to learn. If you need immediate intent-driven leads, search ads capture people already looking for you — and if you are weighing the long game instead, our comparison of pay-per-click vs SEO explains which channel fits which timeline.
Your entire budget is under SGD 500 per month. At that level, put it into one channel where it can gather meaningful data rather than spreading it thin.
Real Singapore Case Study: Tuition Centre in Jurong East
Business: A secondary-level tuition centre in Jurong East offering maths and science programmes, with one branch and capacity for around 180 students.
Situation: The centre had been spending SGD 6,000 per month on a mix of flyer distribution and broad Google search ads. Enquiries were stuck at around 14 per month, and the search campaigns were bidding on broad keywords like "tuition Singapore" that attracted clicks from every district — most parents who clicked were nowhere near Jurong East.
Problems identified: Broad keywords with wrong-intent clicks eating 60% of spend, no geographic discipline in targeting, zero presence in the long research phase where parents compare centres, and no conversion tracking distinguishing a contact-page visit from an actual enquiry.
What we fixed: We rebuilt tracking first, so every enquiry form submission and WhatsApp click was counted. We pruned the search campaigns down to long-tail, location-specific keywords and added a negative keyword list. Then we shifted SGD 2,200 of the monthly budget into YouTube: a 30-second skippable in-stream ad showing an actual lesson and the centre's results wall, targeted to parents aged 35–50 within 6km of Jurong East, plus 6-second bumper retargeting for everyone who watched 50% or more.
Results after 90 days:
Enquiries rose from 14 per month to 47 per month on the same total budget
Cost per enquiry fell from SGD 428 to SGD 127
The YouTube campaigns delivered views at an average CPV of SGD 0.08, with 41% of enquiries coming from parents who had seen the video at least twice
Trial class sign-ups converted to enrolments at 58%, adding an estimated SGD 21,000 in monthly recurring fee revenue by month four
The lesson: YouTube did not replace search — it filled the research phase that search ads alone could never reach, and the retargeting loop between the two channels is what moved the numbers. It is also worth noting what the centre did not do: it did not increase total budget, did not hire a production company (the ad was filmed in two hours on a mirrorless camera the owner already had), and did not touch its fees or curriculum. The growth came entirely from putting the same money in front of the right parents at the right stage of their decision, and from finally being able to measure which dollar produced which enquiry.
What's Changing for YouTube Ads in 2026
1. Shorts inventory is the value play — for now. Shorts ads in Singapore are still priced 30–50% below standard in-stream CPMs because inventory is growing faster than advertiser demand. That gap closed quickly in the US market during 2025, and we expect Singapore CPMs to climb through 2026 as more local advertisers move in. Businesses that build vertical video capability now lock in the cheap-reach window.
2. AI-driven campaign types are absorbing manual control. Google continues to push advertisers toward AI-managed formats that bundle YouTube with other placements and auto-generate ad variations. These can work well, but they reward advertisers with clean conversion data and punish accounts with sloppy tracking — the AI optimises toward whatever signal you feed it, garbage in, garbage out.
3. Connected TV viewing keeps rising. More Singaporeans now watch YouTube on their living-room TVs than on desktop computers. TV-screen ads cannot be clicked the way mobile ads can, so smart advertisers pair living-room awareness ads with QR codes or memorable offers, and measure lift in branded searches rather than last-click conversions.
4. Measurement is shifting from clicks to lift. With more viewing happening on TV screens and privacy rules limiting individual tracking, Google is expanding tools that measure brand lift and search lift — did people who saw your ad subsequently search for your brand or visit your site through any door? For Singapore SMEs this is good news: it finally gives video credit for the influence it always had but last-click reporting never showed. The practical move is to watch your branded search volume and direct traffic alongside in-platform conversions when judging YouTube performance.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much do YouTube ads cost in Singapore?
Most Singapore advertisers pay SGD 0.05–0.15 per view for skippable ads, or SGD 4–16 per 1,000 impressions depending on format. A realistic SME starting budget is SGD 1,000–2,000 per month in media spend, plus production and management costs if you outsource those.
What is a good monthly budget for YouTube ads for a Singapore SME?
SGD 1,000–2,000 per month is the sweet spot to start: enough to gather meaningful data within a month, small enough to limit downside while testing. Scale up once your cost per enquiry stabilises over 3–4 consecutive weeks.
Do I pay if someone skips my ad?
Not for skippable in-stream ads. You pay only if the viewer watches 30 seconds (or the full ad if shorter) or interacts with it. Viewers who skip at second five cost you nothing — those first five seconds are effectively free branding.
Are YouTube ads worth it for small businesses in Singapore?
Yes, if your offer benefits from being shown rather than described, and you can commit to a 3-month test with at least SGD 1,000 monthly. Singapore's high YouTube penetration means even niche local audiences are reachable at low CPVs. If your product is purely search-driven commodity buying, search ads may return faster.
How much does it cost to make a YouTube ad video?
Anywhere from near-zero for a well-lit smartphone video to SGD 800–2,500 for a freelance videographer, up to SGD 3,000–12,000 for full professional production. Performance depends more on the first 3 seconds and the offer than on production gloss.
What results can I expect in the first month?
Expect data, not miracles. Month one establishes your baseline CPV, view rate, and early conversion signals while Google's systems learn. Meaningful cost-per-enquiry numbers usually emerge in weeks 4–8. Judge the test at week 6, not week 2.
How do I know if I am overpaying for YouTube ads?
Benchmark against the ranges in this guide: skippable CPVs above SGD 0.20, or CPMs above SGD 18 outside peak season, usually signal targeting or creative problems. Inside the account, a view rate below 20% means your creative is not holding attention, which inflates every other cost.
Should I run YouTube ads myself or hire an agency?
Run them yourself if you have the hours and enjoy learning ad platforms — this guide gives you the cost benchmarks to sanity-check your numbers. Hire help if your time is worth more in the business, or if a 20–30% efficiency gain from professional management exceeds the fee, which it usually does above SGD 1,500 monthly spend.
Can YouTube ads work together with my Google search ads?
They work best together. YouTube fills the research phase and builds the audience; search captures the high-intent moment when someone finally types "tuition centre near me". Sharing one Google Ads account also lets both campaign types pool conversion data, which improves automated bidding for each.
How long should my YouTube ad be?
For skippable in-stream, 20–30 seconds is the sweet spot for Singapore SME campaigns: long enough to land a message, short enough to hold completion rates up. Build 6-second bumper cuts from the same footage for retargeting. Anything over 60 seconds should be reserved for warm audiences who already know you.
Is GST charged on YouTube ad spend in Singapore?
Yes. Google charges Singapore-based accounts GST on top of your media spend under the overseas vendor registration regime, so budget for the prevailing GST rate above your planned ad spend. The GST appears on your Google invoice and is claimable as input tax if your business is GST-registered.
Conclusion: What You Should Actually Budget
YouTube ads in Singapore are neither the bargain some agencies promise nor the money pit skeptics fear. For an SME, the realistic all-in picture is SGD 1,000–2,000 per month in media spend, a few hundred dollars amortised monthly for creative, and either your own hours or a management fee on top. In return, you reach thousands of precisely targeted local viewers at a cost per view lower than almost any other channel in the market.
The decision in front of you is not really "can I afford YouTube ads" — it is whether your business is ready to use them: a video worth showing, a website that converts, tracking that counts what matters, and the patience to let campaigns learn. Get those four right and the cost question answers itself, because every dollar becomes measurable. The businesses that build video advertising capability in 2026, while Shorts inventory is still cheap and most local competitors are still hesitating, will own an advantage that gets more expensive to copy every year.
Get a Free YouTube Ads Cost Assessment
If you want to know what YouTube ads would actually cost for your specific business — your industry, your audience, your goals — we will work it out for you, free. No sales pitch, no obligation, just honest expert analysis from a team that manages YouTube ads for Singapore businesses every day.
In your free assessment, PaperCutCollective will analyse:
Your realistic CPV and CPM ranges based on your industry and audience
Which ad formats fit your goal — and which would waste your budget
Whether your website and tracking are ready to convert video traffic
A month-by-month budget plan with expected enquiry volumes
How YouTube should fit alongside your existing search or social campaigns
Book your free consultation here — bring your questions, and we will bring real numbers.




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