The cost of advertising on MeTV is not publicly posted as a single fixed rate ; the network’s advertising page only says to contact them for advertising inquiries, which suggests pricing is handled case by case. A public report from a local station lawsuit says some MeTV spots in one market ran for about $25 for a 30-second ad during weekday daytime programming, but that appears to be a specific local example rather than a network-wide price.

What affects the price

  • Market size and city.
  • Time slot, especially whether it airs during daytime or higher-demand programming.
  • Spot length, such as 15 seconds versus 30 seconds.
  • Whether you buy locally through an affiliate or through a broader media buyer.

Practical range

Local TV advertising often ranges widely, and recent industry writeups put local TV spots anywhere from a few hundred dollars to several thousand dollars per spot depending on market and daypart. That makes the $25 figure an unusually low example, not a typical national benchmark.

How to get an exact quote

MeTV directs advertisers to its inquiry page rather than posting rates, so the most reliable way to price a campaign is to request a quote for your exact market and schedule. If you’re comparing options, ask for:

  • CPM or spot cost.
  • Daypart breakdown.
  • Minimum spend.
  • Production costs, if any.
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Source What it suggests
MeTV advertise page No public rate card; inquiries handled directly
Local lawsuit report Example of $25 for a 30-second MeTV spot in one market
Local TV industry guides Common local TV pricing can range from hundreds to thousands per spot
TL;DR: MeTV does not appear to publish a standard ad price, and real costs depend heavily on market and airtime; a public example suggests $25 for a 30-second daytime spot in one local market, while broader local TV pricing is often much higher.