So back in March 2025, I was getting kinda bored with my ad network rotation. I had AdSense doing its thing, but honestly the CPMs were tanking on my tech blog. A buddy in the publisher Slack mentioned he’d been testing this network called Gravitec and said it was actually printing money compared to what he usually made. I was skeptical because everyone’s always hyping up the next big thing, but I figured why not throw it into the mix alongside Mediavine and Adsterra just to see what happened.
I’m not gonna lie — I almost didn’t sign up because the whole process felt kinda sketchy at first. The landing page looked decent enough, but there were these grammatical things that made me go “hmm” right away. Like, not terrible, but you know that feeling when you’re not 100% sure if you’re dealing with a legit company or something that’ll ghost you in six months? That was my vibe. But I figured the worst that could happen is I’d lose an ad slot for a month.
| Founded | 2019 |
| Ad Formats | Display, Native, Video, Interstitial |
| Minimum Payout | $10 USD |
| Payment Methods | PayPal, Wire Transfer, Skrill |
| Approval Time | 2-3 business days |
| Best For | Mid-tier publishers, tech/gaming content |
The signup itself took like 15 minutes. I just filled out the basic info, plugged in my site URL, and waited. They approved me in two days, which was actually faster than I expected. The dashboard when I first logged in was… not pretty. Like, it works, but it’s not going to win any design awards. It reminds me of what analytics dashboards looked like in 2018. Lots of stats crammed into a busy interface. But honestly once I got used to it, I could find what I needed.
I decided to test their display ads first because that’s the easiest to implement. I just grabbed the code and tossed it in my sidebar and above my main content area. Super straightforward. No drama with implementation. Within 24 hours I was getting impressions, which was cool. The ads actually looked decent on desktop, not that spammy garbage you see on some networks.
Then I got brave and added their native ads format in my content recommendations section. This is where things got interesting. Native ads are basically ads designed to look like your content, so they don’t feel as intrusive. I was worried they’d mess with user experience but honestly readers barely seemed to notice them. And the performance? Wild different from the display ads.
Video ads came next, but I gotta be real — my site isn’t really a video destination so I didn’t push those hard. They’re there, but they weren’t a game changer for me. The interstitials I tested for like a week and then killed them because my bounce rate spiked like crazy. Not worth the extra few bucks if people are leaving.
Here’s the part I know you actually care about. The money.
My first full month was April 2025. I had 60,922 pageviews that month and made $128.47. That sounds… fine? Not great, not terrible. I remember being in my Slack group and people were basically like “that’s pretty standard for your traffic level.” But here’s what happened next that made me keep testing.
| Month | Pageviews | Earnings | CPM (Avg) |
| April 2025 | 60,922 | $128.47 | $2.11 |
| May 2025 | 67,340 | $187.23 | $2.78 |
| June 2025 | 71,205 | $234.56 | $3.29 |
| July 2025 | 68,450 | $198.72 | $2.90 |
| August 2025 | 75,120 | $267.43 | $3.56 |
| September 2025 | 82,340 | $298.67 | $3.63 |
| October 2025 | 79,885 | $289.34 | $3.62 |
| November 2025 | 91,203 | $356.78 | $3.91 |
| December 2025 | 88,567 | $342.15 | $3.86 |
Yeah. So that happened. My earnings basically tripled over nine months. And my traffic only went up like 45%. That’s the part that surprised me. The CPM kept climbing. By November I was hitting almost $4 CPM, which honestly sounds crazy for a publisher running this network solo.
I think what happened is their algorithm got smarter at matching ads to my content. Or their advertiser pool improved. Or both. I don’t know exactly what shifted, but I wasn’t complaining.
Let me break down what I was actually getting paid by geography because this matters a lot:
| Country | Average CPM | Range (Low-High) |
| United States | $5.24 | $4.10 – $7.85 |
| United Kingdom | $4.67 | $3.50 – $6.40 |
| Germany | $3.89 | $2.75 – $5.30 |
| India | $0.67 | $0.40 – $1.15 |
| Pakistan | $0.42 | $0.25 – $0.78 |
This is super typical for ad networks. US traffic is basically 8-10x more valuable than India or Pakistan. It’s just how it is. My traffic skews heavily toward US and UK readers, which is why my CPMs stayed relatively healthy. If you’re getting mostly developing market traffic, don’t expect to make bank with Gravitec (or honestly any premium network).
Now about payments. This is the part where a lot of networks either win or totally screw you.
I set up PayPal and requested my first payout in early May. It showed up in my account in two business days. No drama. No weird holds or questions. Every month after that was the same. Payment on the 5th of the month for the previous month’s earnings, in my PayPal by the 7th. I actually can’t complain about this at all. I’ve had networks where payouts take weeks or require you to reach some high threshold. Gravitec’s $10 minimum is honestly laughable — I hit that in my first week.
| Payment Method | Processing Time | My Experience |
| PayPal | 2-3 business days | Always arrived on time, no fees |
| Wire Transfer | 3-5 business days | Didn’t test this, but bank fees might apply |
| Skrill | 1-2 business days | Didn’t test, but meant for international publishers |
Is Gravitec legit? Yeah, I think so. I was paranoid at first, but here’s what made me realize they’re not some sketchy operation: my earnings were consistent, payments were always there, and when I contacted support with a stupid question about their reporting format, they actually responded in like 6 hours. Not the typical “we’ll get back to you in 5-7 business days” nonsense.
I will say their support chat interface is clunky. Like, you have to navigate through this dashboard submenu to even find the chat. And their response times aren’t like instant or anything. But they respond. That counts for something.
The good stuff: The CPMs climbed consistently. The payment system is bulletproof. The ad formats don’t feel spammy on my site. The dashboard eventually makes sense once you stop hating it. They seem to have a solid advertiser base. I didn’t have any weird traffic quality issues or sudden disapprovals.
The bad stuff: The dashboard really is pretty clunky. The support is slow by modern standards. There’s zero real documentation — like, if you want to learn about their ad serving algorithm or optimization tips, you’re basically guessing. The native ad format sometimes displays weird on mobile (I had to tweak some CSS myself). And honestly, the company’s website and brand feel a little generic. Like they could disappear and I wouldn’t be shocked, even though the actual service has been solid.
Who should use this? Anyone running a mid-tier site (30k-200k monthly pageviews) in tech, finance, or business niches would probably do really well. Your content matters because better content attracts better-paying ads. If you’ve got US/UK traffic, even better. If you’re a massive publisher pulling millions of pageviews, you should probably be working with Mediavine or better. If you’re just starting out and have like 5k monthly pageviews, the earnings won’t move the needle yet, but you could still set it up and see.
Who should skip this? Anyone in ultra-niche content where they can’t get decent CPMs anyway. Anyone monetizing primarily developing market traffic. Anyone who really needs hands-on publisher support. Anyone who wants a beautiful dashboard (use Adsense for that). Anyone who needs same-day payment (not gonna happen).
Let me answer the questions I keep getting about this:
1. Does Gravitec require you to quit other ad networks? No. I was running Adsterra in different slots the whole time. Just make sure you’re not double-placing ads in the same spot. That’ll get you booted from both networks.
2. What’s the fraud detection like? I never got flagged, and my traffic is totally legit. I didn’t try anything weird. Their detection seems standard — they probably look for invalid traffic patterns like bots clicking your ads. If you’re running clean traffic, you’re fine.
3. Can you see impressions vs clicks vs actual earnings easily? Yeah, the dashboard shows all that. It’s not the cleanest interface ever but all the data is there. You can filter by date range, ad format, country, everything. I wanted a weekly view and had to export to CSV like a caveman, but it worked.
4. How often do they update payouts or change terms? I haven’t seen any major changes in my 10 months. They sent one email about GDPR compliance stuff but that didn’t affect my earnings or process. Seems pretty stable.
5. What happens if you stop using them? I didn’t test this, but there’s no long-term contract. I could yank their code tomorrow and I’m done. They don’t penalize you or anything.
6. Do they have a minimum traffic requirement? No official minimum that I know of. They approved me knowing my traffic level. Might take them a bit longer if you’re super tiny though.
7. What about on mobile? Do mobile CPMs suck? Nah, actually my mobile CPMs were only like 15-20% lower than desktop. That’s way better than some networks. Their mobile ad formats actually work.
8. Is the money really 30-40% better than AdSense like people claim? For me it was. My Adsense was running lower CPMs during the same period. Not a fair comparison since my content quality might matter, but yeah, I was definitely making more with Gravitec.
So here’s my honest rating: 7.5 out of 10.
It’s not perfect. The interface needs work. The support could be faster. The company should invest in actually explaining their platform. But the money is real, the payments are reliable, and the CPMs actually improved over time. For a mid-tier publisher, this has been a legitimate income boost. It did surprise me in a good way, which is rare in the ad network space where most companies are basically the same.
Would I recommend setting it up? Yeah, absolutely. It’ll take you 30 minutes and there’s no downside if it doesn’t work for you. Worst case you leave and try something else. But I think you’ll probably be happily surprised by what it brings in.
I’m still running it. Probably will keep running it unless something goes really wrong. Update me if you test it too — I’m curious if other publishers are seeing the same CPM growth I experienced.
Disclosure: Some of the links mentioned in this review may be affiliate links. If you sign up through an affiliate link, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend networks I’ve actually tested and used myself.
