How much should you spend on Google Ads? It's one of the most common questions we get.
Of course, the only thing we can answer is: it depends. But not in a vague, non-committal way. It depends on specific numbers that you either already have or can estimate with a little work.
The problem isn't that Google Ads budgets are complicated. It's that most brands set them based on what they're comfortable spending rather than what they need to spend to hit a goal. Those are two very different things, and confusing them is usually why Google Ads feels like a money pit.
Here's how to set a Google Ads budget that's tied to your actual business. Not just a number that sounds reasonable.
Why Google Ads Budgeting Is Different from Meta
If you've run Facebook Ads before, Google requires a slight mindset shift.
On Meta, you're interrupting people who weren't looking for you. On Google Search, you're showing up exactly when someone is already searching for what you sell.
That changes the math. Facebook ads budget is one thing. But search intent is higher, which typically means better conversion rates, but also higher CPCs (cost per click), since you're bidding against competitors for the same high-intent traffic.
Google Shopping campaigns (now largely run through Performance Max) add another layer. You're not just bidding on keywords, you're competing on product feed quality, price competitiveness, and landing page experience.
The takeaway: Google Ads can deliver strong returns for eCommerce brands, but only when your budget is calibrated to the competition in your category and the margins in your business.
Step 1: Start with Your Target CPA
Before you open Google Ads and set a campaign budget, you need to know your target CPA: the maximum you can pay to acquire a customer and still make money.
Here's the quick formula:
- Average Order Value (AOV) × Gross Margin % = Gross Profit per Order
- Gross Profit per Order × acceptable ad spend ratio = Max CPA
For example, if your AOV is $90 and your margin is 50%, you're generating $45 in gross profit per order. If you're comfortable spending 40% of that on ads, your max CPA is $18.
Your target CPA should be below that ceiling — leaving room for profit after other costs.
💡 TIP: If you sell products with repeat purchase potential, you can afford a higher CPA because you're acquiring a customer, not just a transaction. Factor in LTV when setting your ceiling, not just the first-order margin. Use our LTV Calculator to get that number dialed in.
Step 2: Work Backward from Revenue Goals
Once you know your CPA, reverse-engineering your budget is straightforward.
- Monthly revenue goal ÷ AOV = Orders needed
- Orders needed × Target CPA = Required monthly budget
Example:
- Revenue goal: $30,000/month from Google Ads
- AOV: $100
- Orders needed: 300
- Target CPA: $22
- Required budget: ~$6,600/month
This won't be exact — Google's algorithm will optimize over time and your actual CPA will fluctuate — but it gives you a principled starting point anchored in real business math, not a random number.
💸 Skip the spreadsheet. Use our free Google Ads Budget Calculator to model your spend based on revenue goals, CPA, and conversion rate in under a minute.
Step 3: Understand How Google Spends Your Budget
Google doesn't spend your budget in a perfectly even line. A few things to know before you launch:
Daily Budget vs. Monthly Spend
Google targets your daily budget × 30.4 as your monthly cap. But on any given day, it can spend up to 2× your daily budget to capture high-traffic opportunities — as long as the monthly total stays within limit.
That means if you set a $100/day budget, expect some days at $60 and others at $180. It averages out, but it can look alarming early on.
Smart Bidding Needs Data
If you're using Target CPA or Target ROAS bidding (which you should be, eventually), Google's algorithm needs 30–50 conversions per month per campaign to optimize reliably. Below that threshold, it's essentially guessing.
This is the most common reason new Google Ads accounts underperform — not enough conversion data for Smart Bidding to work properly. If your budget can't generate 30+ conversions per month, consider starting with Maximize Conversions bidding to build data before switching to a CPA target.
Campaign Structure Affects Budget Efficiency
Spreading $3,000/month across 8 campaigns dilutes your data and slows the learning process. Start focused — one or two well-structured campaigns — then expand as performance data gives you confidence.
What a Realistic Google Ads Budget Looks Like for eCom Brands
| Stage | Monthly Budget Range | What to Focus On |
|---|---|---|
| Testing / New Account | $1,500–$3,000 | Validate keywords, build conversion data |
| Early Growth | $3,000–$8,000 | Optimize bids, expand best-performing ad groups |
| Scaling | $8,000–$25,000 | Performance Max, Shopping expansion, branded defense |
| Aggressive Scale | $25,000+ | Full-funnel coverage, competitor targeting, DSA |
These ranges assume a moderately competitive eCommerce category. Highly competitive verticals (supplements, apparel, electronics) will require more budget to generate the same results because CPCs are higher across the board.
Step 4: Budget Allocation Across Campaign Types
Not all Google Ads spend is equal. For eCommerce, a typical budget split might look like this:
- Performance Max / Shopping (50–60%) — your product feed campaigns, usually the highest-volume driver of purchases
- Branded Search (10–15%) — protect your brand name from competitors, typically low CPC and high conversion rate
- Non-branded Search (25–35%) — high-intent keyword targeting for buyers who don't know you yet
"Performance Max now accounts for the majority of Google's eCommerce ad inventory, combining Shopping, Display, YouTube, and Search into a single campaign type." — Google Ads Help Center, 2024 campaign documentation
From our perspective: PMax can work well for scaling, but it's a black box. Pair it with strong brand campaigns and clear conversion tracking so you're not flying blind on where your results are actually coming from.
Step 5: Account for Competition and CPC in Your Category
Your budget doesn't exist in a vacuum — it competes with every other advertiser targeting the same keywords.
Average CPCs vary widely by category:
| Category | Avg. CPC Range |
|---|---|
| Apparel & Fashion | $0.50–$1.50 |
| Home & Garden | $0.80–$2.50 |
| Health & Supplements | $1.50–$4.00 |
| Electronics | $0.75–$2.00 |
| B2B / Software | $3.00–$10.00+ |
Higher CPCs mean you need a larger budget to generate the same volume of clicks — and conversions. Use the CPC Calculator to model how your CPC targets translate to traffic and spend at different budget levels.
💡 TIP: Use Google's Keyword Planner (free inside Google Ads) to get CPC estimates for your top keywords before you set your budget. It won't be perfectly accurate, but it'll tell you whether you're budgeting for a $1 CPC category or a $5 CPC category — which changes everything.
The Real Answer to "How Much Should I Spend?"
Enough to generate at least 30–50 conversions per month per campaign, at a CPA that keeps your margins healthy.
That's the minimum for the algorithm to work. Everything below that is a test, not a real read on performance.
If your current budget can't hit that threshold, you have two options: consolidate your campaigns until each one has enough data to optimize, or increase your budget until they do. Spreading a small budget thin is the fastest way to conclude that "Google Ads doesn't work" when the real problem is math.
💼 Want a team to manage this for you? TGM runs Google Ads for eCommerce brands at every stage — from initial setup to full-scale Shopping and PMax management. See how we work.
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