TLDR
- ChatGPT’s advertising experiment achieved over $100 million in annualized revenue within 45 days of launch
- More than 600 companies are participating in OpenAI’s advertising initiative
- Ads reach less than 20% of qualified users each day, indicating significant growth potential
- Advertisements display beneath ChatGPT responses without affecting AI-generated answers
- International expansion targeting Canada, Australia, and New Zealand is underway
OpenAI’s experimental advertising program for ChatGPT has achieved an impressive milestone, generating $100 million in annualized revenue within just six weeks of its U.S. launch. An OpenAI representative confirmed this achievement on March 26, 2026.
🚨 JUST IN: OpenAI’s U.S. ad pilot exceeds $100 million in annualized revenue within six weeks.
Ads currently shown to fewer than 20% of eligible users, leaving significant room for growth.
OpenAI plans global expansion in coming weeks.$MSFT $GOOGL $META $NVDA pic.twitter.com/Hkn2Hbnx1t
— MarketPulseHQ (@MPulseHQ) March 27, 2026
Launched in January 2026, the initiative introduced advertisements to users on the free tier and the budget-friendly Go subscription plan. These promotional messages display at the conclusion of ChatGPT’s responses with transparent labeling.
OpenAI has emphasized that advertisements don’t influence the chatbot’s output. Additionally, user dialogue remains private and isn’t disclosed to marketing partners.
The program now includes participation from over 600 advertising partners. Approximately 80% of small and medium-sized enterprise participants have indicated their intention to maintain their involvement with ChatGPT’s advertising platform.
While roughly 85% of free-tier and Go plan subscribers in the United States qualify for ad exposure, daily ad impressions reach fewer than one in five eligible users.
Minors under age 18 are excluded from seeing advertisements. The platform also blocks ads from appearing alongside discussions involving political topics, healthcare matters, or mental wellness subjects.
Slow Rollout by Design
According to previous CNBC coverage, certain advertisers have voiced concerns regarding the implementation timeline. OpenAI clarified that this measured approach reflects deliberate strategy.
“We’re in the early testing phase of ads in ChatGPT, and the goal right now is to learn and refine the experience for consumers before expanding it more broadly,” the company said.
OpenAI has observed minimal ad dismissal rates and reports no adverse effects on consumer confidence measurements to date.
The organization also highlighted continuous enhancements in advertisement targeting accuracy as it gathers input from both users and commercial partners.
New Hire and Global Expansion
David Dugan, previously an advertising executive at Meta, was recently appointed to oversee OpenAI’s worldwide advertising solutions division. This recruitment signals the company’s commitment to formalizing its advertising operations.
OpenAI intends to introduce self-service advertising tools in April. This feature will enable companies to create and oversee campaigns independently without requiring direct company coordination.
International expansion is scheduled for the upcoming weeks, with Canada, Australia, and New Zealand identified as the initial overseas markets.
The advertising initiative has faced some opposition. Competitor Anthropic directly criticized the strategy in its debut Super Bowl commercial, ridiculing OpenAI’s choice to incorporate advertising into its AI platform.
OpenAI stated it remains optimistic about preliminary feedback from both users and brand partners, noting that advertiser enthusiasm remains robust.
