How Much Should You Spend on Google Ads? (The Honest Answer)

How-Much-Should-You-Spend-on-Google-Ads
72%of businesses waste their Google Ads budget
$100minimum daily budget to get meaningful data
3xmore leads when budget matches industry CPC
30dminimum to judge if a campaign is working

One of the most common questions we get at Zexers is “how much should I spend on Google Ads?” It sounds simple — but the honest answer is it depends on several factors that are specific to your business, your industry, and your goals.

The good news is there’s a clear formula for working out the right budget for your business. In this guide we’ll walk you through exactly how to calculate it — and the budget mistakes that cause most businesses to waste their ad spend.

The short answer: For most service businesses, a starting Google Ads budget of $500–$2,000 per month is enough to generate consistent leads — if the campaign is set up correctly. But the right number for your business depends on your industry, your location, and what a new client is worth to you.

Why “How Much Should I Spend?” Is the Wrong Question

Most business owners approach Google Ads with a fixed budget in mind — “I have $500 a month, will that work?” But that’s the wrong starting point. The right question is:

“What is a new client worth to me — and how much am I willing to spend to get one?”

Once you know that number everything else falls into place. If a new client is worth $5,000 to your business and you’re willing to spend $500 to acquire one — you need your Google Ads to deliver leads at a cost per lead that converts to clients at $500 or less. Your budget is then determined by how many clients you want per month.

Example

How to think about budget the right way

Let’s say you run a law firm:

  • Average client value: $8,000
  • You’re willing to spend 10% to acquire a client: $800 max cost per acquisition
  • Your landing page converts at 15% (industry average for law)
  • That means you can spend up to $120 per lead ($800 × 15%)
  • Average CPC for law keywords: $40–$80
  • To get 10 leads you need roughly 70 clicks at $60 average = $4,200/month
  • 10 leads at 30% close rate = 3 new clients × $8,000 = $24,000 revenue
  • $4,200 spent → $24,000 revenue = 5.7x ROAS

This is how profitable Google Ads budgeting works — backwards from client value, not forwards from what feels comfortable.

5 Factors That Determine Your Google Ads Budget

Factor 1

Your industry’s average cost per click (CPC)

Different industries have wildly different CPCs on Google. A click for “personal injury lawyer” costs $80–$150. A click for “wedding photographer” costs $1–$3. Your budget needs to be large enough to get a meaningful number of clicks in your industry.

If your industry CPC is $50 and your budget is $300/month — you get 6 clicks. That’s not enough data to optimise anything or generate consistent leads. You need at minimum 2–3 clicks per day to gather useful data.

IndustryAverage CPCMinimum Monthly Budget
Legal Services$40–$150$2,000–$5,000
Medical / Healthcare$20–$60$1,500–$3,000
Real Estate$15–$40$1,000–$2,500
Home Services$10–$30$500–$1,500
B2B / SaaS$15–$50$1,500–$4,000
E-commerce$0.50–$5$500–$2,000
Education$5–$20$500–$1,500
Factor 2

Your target location

CPCs vary dramatically by location. Advertising in New York, London, or Sydney costs significantly more than advertising in smaller cities or towns. A $1,000/month budget goes much further targeting a specific city than it does targeting an entire country.

Rule of thumb: Start with the tightest geographic targeting that still gives you enough audience. A local plumber should target their city — not the whole country.

Factor 3

Your conversion rate

The higher your landing page conversion rate, the less you need to spend to get a lead. If your page converts at 2% you need 50 clicks per lead. If it converts at 10% you need 10 clicks per lead — 5x more efficient with the same budget.

This is why fixing your landing page before increasing your budget is always the right move. A better converting page stretches every dollar further.

Factor 4

Your competition level

Highly competitive industries and locations drive up CPCs because more advertisers are bidding on the same keywords. Check your Search Impression Share in Google Ads — if it’s below 50%, your budget may be too low to compete effectively in your market.

Factor 5

Your business goals

How many new clients do you want per month? Work backwards from that number. If you want 5 new clients, know your close rate (e.g. 25%), which means you need 20 leads. If your cost per lead is $100, you need $2,000/month in ad spend.

Recommended Budgets by Industry

Based on our experience managing campaigns across multiple industries, here are realistic starting budgets for businesses new to Google Ads:

Business TypeStarting BudgetExpected Leads/Month
Local service business$500–$1,000/mo10–25 leads
Professional services (law, medical)$2,000–$5,000/mo15–40 leads
Real estate agency$1,500–$3,000/mo20–50 leads
B2B company$2,000–$6,000/mo10–30 leads
E-commerce store$1,000–$5,000/moVaries by product
SaaS / Tech company$3,000–$10,000/mo20–60 leads
Important: These are starting budgets for a well-optimised campaign. An unoptimised campaign with poor keyword targeting, no negative keywords, and a weak landing page will burn through any budget without generating leads. Budget alone doesn’t determine results — strategy does.

What Is the Minimum Budget That Actually Works?

This is one of the most important questions — and most agencies won’t give you a straight answer. We will.

The Rule

Minimum $10–$15 per day to gather meaningful data

Google Ads needs data to optimise. If your daily budget is too low you won’t get enough clicks to make informed decisions or for Google’s algorithm to learn what works.

Our minimum recommendations:

  • Low CPC industries (home services, local retail) — minimum $300–$500/month
  • Medium CPC industries (real estate, education) — minimum $1,000–$1,500/month
  • High CPC industries (legal, medical, finance) — minimum $2,000–$3,000/month

Below these minimums you simply won’t get enough data or clicks to generate consistent leads. You might get occasional enquiries but nothing predictable or scalable.

How to Calculate Your Ideal Budget

The Formula

4 step budget calculation

  1. What is a new client worth to you? (lifetime value or average project value)
    Example: $3,000
  2. What % of that are you willing to spend to acquire a client?
    Example: 15% = $450 max cost per acquisition
  3. What is your landing page conversion rate? (enquiries ÷ visitors)
    Example: 10% conversion rate = $450 × 10% = $45 max cost per lead
  4. What is the average CPC in your industry?
    Example: $15 CPC ÷ 10% conversion = $150 cost per lead

If your max CPL ($45) is lower than your calculated CPL ($150) — either your conversion rate needs improving, your CPC is too high, or your client value calculation needs revisiting.

Monthly budget = Target leads per month × Cost per lead
Example: 20 leads × $45 = $900/month budget

Budget Mistakes That Waste Money

Mistake 1

Starting with too small a budget and giving up too soon

Google Ads needs at least 30 days and enough clicks to optimise. Businesses that start with $200/month, get no leads in the first two weeks, and give up — never gave it a fair chance. Budget too small = not enough data = poor results = wrong conclusion that “Google Ads doesn’t work.”

Mistake 2

Scaling budget before fixing conversion problems

If your campaign is generating clicks but no leads — doubling your budget just doubles your losses. Always fix your landing page, ad relevance, and keyword targeting before increasing spend. More budget amplifies what’s already working — it can’t fix what’s broken.

Mistake 3

Spreading budget across too many campaigns

Running 5 campaigns at $100/month each gives each campaign $3.30/day — not enough for any of them to generate data or results. Concentrate your budget on 1–2 campaigns maximum when starting out. Master one campaign, then expand.

Mistake 4

Not accounting for Google’s budget pacing

Google can spend up to 2x your daily budget on any given day to capture high-traffic moments — but averages out over the month. So a $1,000/month budget ($33/day) might see $60 spent on one day and $10 on another. This is normal — judge performance monthly, not daily.

When and How to Scale Your Budget

Scaling Rules

Only scale when these 3 conditions are met

  1. Your CPL is at or below your target — you know what a lead costs and it’s profitable
  2. You have at least 30 conversions in the last 30 days — Google’s AI has enough data to optimise effectively
  3. Your conversion tracking is accurate — you know exactly which clicks are generating leads

When all three are true — increase budget by 20–30% at a time. Never double your budget overnight. Sudden large increases can disrupt Google’s algorithm and cause performance to drop temporarily.

The golden rule of Google Ads budgeting: Start with enough to get meaningful data, optimise until your CPL is profitable, then scale gradually. Patience in the first 60 days saves you thousands in wasted spend and sets you up for consistent, scalable lead generation.

Not Sure What Budget Is Right for Your Business?

Book a free strategy call with Zexers. We’ll analyse your industry, your goals, and your current setup — and give you a clear recommended budget with realistic lead projections before you spend a penny.

Book My Free Strategy Call

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can I run Google Ads with a $500 budget?
Yes — but only in lower CPC industries like local home services, photography, or retail. For high CPC industries like legal or medical, $500/month won’t generate enough clicks to produce consistent leads. In those industries $2,000+ is the realistic minimum for meaningful results.
How long before I see results from Google Ads?
Most well-set-up campaigns generate their first leads within the first 1–2 weeks. However you need at least 30 days to properly judge performance. Google’s smart bidding algorithms need time to learn, and you need enough data to make informed optimisation decisions. Don’t judge a campaign in the first two weeks.
Should I increase my budget if my ads aren’t working?
No — not until you understand why they aren’t working. More budget on a broken campaign just burns money faster. Diagnose the problem first: check your Search Terms report for irrelevant clicks, check your landing page conversion rate, check your Quality Score. Fix the issue, then consider increasing budget.
Does Google Ads work for small businesses with limited budgets?
Absolutely — but strategy matters more than budget size. A small business with a $600/month budget, tight keyword targeting, a strong landing page, and proper conversion tracking will consistently outperform a larger business spending $3,000/month with poor targeting and no tracking. Budget is one factor — strategy is everything.
What percentage of revenue should I spend on Google Ads?
A common guideline is 5–15% of revenue for marketing overall, with Google Ads being one part of that. But a better approach is to work backwards from your target cost per acquisition — what are you willing to spend to get one new client? That number, multiplied by your monthly client target, gives you a more accurate budget than any percentage rule.
Z
Zexers Performance Team

Performance marketing agency specializing in Google Ads, SEO, and lead generation. We’ve managed Google Ads budgets from $500/month to $50,000/month across legal, medical, real estate, SaaS, and home services industries.

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