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Understanding your estimated earnings

The four cards at the top of the Overview page — Yesterday, Last 7 days, Last 30 days, and Last month — give you an immediate read on how your revenue is trending without needing to open a report. Each card shows the total earnings for that period and a percentage badge in red or green showing how that period compares to the one immediately before it.

What the percentage badge actually compares

The badge is always a like-for-like comparison. Last 7 days compares the current 7-day window to the 7 days before that. Last month compares April to March, for example — not to last year. This makes the trend reading consistent across all four cards, but it also means seasonal patterns can show up as apparent drops. A red badge in January is often seasonal, not a problem.

Why the numbers say "estimated"

Revenue data arrives from multiple demand partners on different schedules, and partners often revise their figures in the days that follow — filtering out invalid traffic, reconciling discrepancies, or finalising their own reporting cycles. The figure you see in the dashboard is the most current available data, but it is not yet confirmed.

Final earnings are confirmed when the month closes. A full data refresh for the previous month happens in the first days of the following month. That finalised figure is what feeds into your invoice.

Currency and VAT

All dashboard values are shown in your selected currency — EUR or USD — which you can change in your profile settings. VAT is never included. If VAT applies to your account, it is added at invoice time, not in the dashboard.

Practical tips
  • If the badge is red for several consecutive days, open the Performance page and look at Impressions and eCPM separately. A drop in one with the other holding steady tells you very different things about the cause.
  • A single red day is almost always noise — reconciliation adjustments, a quiet news day, or a minor demand fluctuation. A sustained red trend over 5–7 days is worth investigating.

See also: How your earnings are calculated · How and when you get paid