OpenAI has begun showing advertising inside ChatGPT to Australian users, making Australia one of the first markets outside the United States to carry paid placements in the world’s most-used chatbot.
The rollout, first reported for the local market by trade title Mumbrella, went live in Australia on 17 April 2026, alongside New Zealand and Canada. It followed a United States pilot that OpenAI switched on in February.
The ads are small, labelled “Sponsored” boxes that sit below ChatGPT’s answers, kept visually separate from the chatbot’s own text. On shopping-style questions, users may also see sponsored product cards that resemble Google Shopping listings.
OpenAI has restricted where the ads appear. According to Mumbrella, placements are limited to logged-in adult users on the free and lower-cost “Go” tiers, with no advertising on the paid Plus, Pro, Business or Enterprise plans.
What OpenAI is promising
OpenAI has framed the change around trust. The company says ChatGPT’s answers will “remain independent and unbiased”, that conversations stay private, and that users keep “meaningful control over their experience”, per its public description cited by Mumbrella.
The privacy design is deliberately narrow. Analysis by Australian agency Shout Digital notes that advertisers cannot see user conversations, chat history, names, email addresses or IP addresses, and that targeting relies on “context hints” describing relevant scenarios rather than keyword bidding.
Targeting is coarse by the standards of established platforms. Multiple agency briefings, including one from Melbourne firm Optimising, report that geo-targeting is country-level only, with no demographic, behavioural or interest-based segments of the kind Meta and Google sell, and that sensitive categories such as health, politics, dating and financial services are blocked.
Who is buying, and what it costs
The early advertiser roster skews global. Agency and industry write-ups list holding companies WPP, Omnicom and Dentsu among the first buyers, alongside brands including Expedia, Adobe, HelloFresh and Ford, drawn largely from the US pilot.
Leadership is familiar to anyone who has watched the social-media ad wars. OpenAI’s advertising push is steered by applications chief Fidji Simo and commercial executive David Dugan, both former Meta operators, as reported in the Optimising briefing.
Pricing has moved fast. Optimising reported that the invite-only US launch carried a minimum spend of roughly US$200,000 and a cost-per-thousand-impressions rate near US$60, about triple Meta’s rates. By the time a self-serve ads manager opened in April, the entry point had fallen sharply, with ClickClick Media reporting CPMs in the US$15 to US$40 range, cost-per-click of roughly US$3 to US$5, and no minimum spend.
Performance data is thinner and should be read with caution. Agency analyses cite an average click-through rate of about 0.91 per cent, well below the 6.4 per cent they quote for Google Search, and note that only aggregated impressions and clicks are reportable so far, with pixel-based attribution and CRM integrations flagged for later in the year. These are third-party estimates, not audited OpenAI figures.
Why it matters for Australia
The local stakes are commercial and structural. Australia’s digital advertising market is dominated by Google and Meta, and a credible third channel with hundreds of millions of users is exactly the kind of competitor that regulators, publishers and agencies have wanted for years.
OpenAI’s reason for picking Australia early was demand. The company said Australian ChatGPT usage more than doubled in the 12 months before the launch, a growth rate that put the country ahead of most of the world, with ChatGPT reporting roughly 900 million weekly active users globally.
For Australian news publishers, already squeezed by the platforms, the arithmetic is uncomfortable. If more product research, travel planning and shopping questions are answered inside a chatbot that now carries its own ads, fewer of those journeys end on a local website that can sell its own inventory or subscriptions.
For the agency sector, it is a fresh skills and revenue line. Local shops are already publishing “readiness” guides, and the consistent advice is cautious: Shout Digital suggests brands with awareness goals can pilot now, while B2B, lead-generation and direct-response advertisers should wait for measurement to mature before shifting budget.
There is also a sovereignty dimension. Ad targeting, data handling and content moderation for a major new channel sit with a US company operating under US commercial priorities, at a time when Canberra is still weighing how AI systems should be governed locally.
The forward look
The immediate question is whether the tooling catches up to the audience. Agencies expect self-serve buying, cost-per-click bidding and conversion measurement to keep expanding across 2026, with attribution and first-party audience features flagged for the final quarter.
The bigger question is trust. OpenAI has staked ChatGPT’s appeal on answers that feel neutral, and it will now be judged on whether “Sponsored” boxes stay clearly walled off from the advice above them.
For Australian marketers, the practical move is modest experimentation while the numbers are unproven. For the wider market, the arrival of ads in ChatGPT signals that the AI assistant is no longer just a productivity tool. It is becoming media, and media in Australia has always been a contest over who controls attention, data and the money that follows both.
Sources: Mumbrella, Shout Digital, Optimising, ClickClick Media.





