How Much to Spend on Google LSAs: Budget Benchmarks by Trade
Key Takeaways
- Google LSA leads average $60 each versus $90.92 for traditional search ads in 2025
- HVAC contractors pay roughly $52 per lead but close at 8.4x ROAS on a $2,433 average ticket
- Roofing LSA spend of $1,600 per month can return $34,000 in revenue - a 21:1 ROI
- LSA adoption among contractors jumped from 28% in 2022 to an estimated 70% by late 2025
Google LSA leads average $60 each - compared to $90.92 for traditional search ads, according to LocaliQ’s analysis of 3,211 home service campaigns in 2025. That gap is real money if you’re spending $2,000 a month on clicks that never call back. The question isn’t whether LSAs work - it’s whether you’re funding them at the right level for your trade.
How Much Does a Google LSA Lead Cost by Trade?
The number changes depending on what you do for a living and where you do it.
LocaliQ’s Google Local Services Ads report, which analyzed over 50,000 service businesses across North America, put HVAC at $52 per lead, house cleaning at $28, and roofing at $71. Those are averages - your market will push them up or down.
The Media Captain compiled CPL data across more than 100 clients and found plumbing leads running around $69, HVAC at $80, and painting near $40. Different sample, similar ballpark.
Here’s a compiled breakdown of what contractors are actually paying per lead on LSAs right now:
| Trade | LSA CPL Range | Avg CPL | Avg Ticket | Lead-to-Customer Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HVAC | $25 - $85 | $52 - $80 | $2,434 | 19.6% |
| Plumbing | $20 - $75 | $55 - $69 | $1,708 | 22.4% |
| Electrical | $15 - $70 | $35 - $50 | $1,676 | Best CAC-to-ticket ratio |
| Roofing | $30 - $95 | $71 - $80 | $8,500+ | ~20% close rate |
| House Cleaning | $15 - $45 | $28 | $150 - $400 | 22% - 38% |
| Tree Services | $35 - $65 | N/A | Varies | N/A |
Geography matters more than most contractors realize. A plumber in Manhattan pays $90 - $120 per lead while a plumber in rural Iowa pays $25 - $40 for the same job type, based on aggregated 2024 - 2025 agency data from LeadTruffle. Urban markets in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago run 20 - 50% above national averages.
What Monthly Budget Actually Makes Sense?
The rule of thumb used by contractors we’ve worked with: your monthly LSA budget should be at least 10 - 15 times your average cost per lead.
If you’re paying $60 per lead, that means a minimum of $600 - $900 per month just to get enough volume for the data to mean anything. Spending $200 a month and complaining LSAs don’t work is like buying one scratch ticket and giving up on gambling.
Most small businesses land in one of two camps. New or smaller operations spend $500 - $1,000 monthly and generate 10 - 20 leads. Established businesses running at scale spend $1,500 - $3,000 monthly and pull 30 - 50 leads. Those ranges come from multiple agency reports and are consistent with what we’ve seen across dozens of contractor accounts.
BaaDigi published a representative scenario based on their 2026 contractor client data: a small plumber spending $1,000 a month at $35 per lead gets roughly 28 leads. If even 20% of those convert on $500+ jobs, that’s $2,800 in revenue from a $1,000 investment. That’s before you factor in repeat customers or referrals from those jobs.
If you’re trying to figure out whether to put budget into LSAs versus SEO first, the comparison between SEO and PPC for home service businesses is worth reading before you commit money either direction.
Does the ROI Actually Hold Up by Trade?
Run the math before you run the ad.
Roofing has the most lopsided ROI of any trade on LSAs. Spending $1,600 a month - 20 leads at $80 each - and closing 4 customers at an $8,500 average job gets you $34,000 in revenue. That’s a 21:1 return. Even if you cut the close rate in half, the numbers still work.
HVAC lands differently. A March 2026 benchmark from The Data Driven Trades Substack found HVAC had the highest customer acquisition cost at $288.29 per paying customer - but also the highest average ticket at $2,433.87 and an 8.4x closed ROAS. Plumbing came in at 6.5x ROAS, electrical at 7.7x.
HomeServiceDirect published client data in February 2026 showing why HVAC numbers swing wildly depending on job type. If your average HVAC repair is $450 and you close 40% of leads at $60 each, you’re generating a 3:1 return. If your average install is $6,500 and you close 25% of leads at that same $60 CPL, you’re looking at a 27:1 return on ad spend. Same CPL, completely different business outcome.
That gap is why what you’re selling matters as much as what you’re spending. ContractorMarketingPros documented a “$49 AC tune-up” campaign in their September 2025 HVAC lead gen analysis that generated leads at $36 each with a 30% close rate - resulting in $120 cost per sale. The kicker: many of those tune-ups rolled into repair or replacement sales averaging $2,400.
Understanding your real revenue numbers matters here. Contractors scaling past seven figures need to track acquisition costs carefully - the guide to scaling from $1M to $3M covers how that math shifts as you add crews.
How Do Google LSA Costs Compare to Traditional Google Ads?
LSAs charge per lead. Traditional PPC charges per click.
LSA conversion rates hit 20 - 25% versus 6 - 8% for traditional PPC, according to aggregated 2024 - 2025 data across hundreds of LSA accounts. That’s not a rounding error - that’s the difference between needing 100 clicks to get 6 calls versus 100 leads to get 20 customers.
The average CPC for home service search ads in 2025 was $7.85 across LocaliQ’s 3,211-campaign sample. Painters pay the most per click at $13.74, followed by electricians at $12.18 and roofers at $10.70. Every one of those clicks might be someone who searched “painting memes” and fat-fingered their way into your ad.
Message leads on LSAs cost roughly half what phone leads cost in many cases. If your office manager is fielding calls all day, message leads can reduce that load while still generating bookable jobs. If you want to understand how response time affects whether those leads ever turn into revenue, the speed-to-lead research on the 5-minute rule is the most important thing you can read after this.
What’s Happening to LSA Costs as More Contractors Join?
LSA adoption among contractors jumped from 28% in 2022 to an estimated 70% by late 2025. That’s nearly tripled in three years.
More contractors on the platform means more competition for the same leads. The same race to the bottom that happened with traditional Google Ads is starting on LSAs - just slower because the platform is newer.
Darren Shaw, founder of Whitespark and one of the most cited voices in local search, flagged this in February 2025: “About 7 months ago they removed the ability for advertisers to dispute irrelevant leads… they started degrading all the leads with a ton of out-of-industry, out-of-city leads.” That policy change happened in July 2024 when Google moved to automated lead credits, and contractors across multiple marketing publications reported immediate drops in lead quality.
This is worth knowing before you increase budget. If you’re getting flooded with leads that don’t match your service area or trade, your cost per real lead is higher than your dashboard shows. Pairing your LSA spend with website visitor identification tools can help you understand who is actually landing on your site versus who is booking.
The contractors who win on LSAs long-term are the ones with more reviews, faster response times, and tighter service areas - not just higher budgets. That same principle applies when you’re expanding into new service areas and deciding whether to spread budget thin or dominate one zone first.
What Factors Push Your LSA Lead Cost Up or Down?
Review count and rating are the most direct levers you control.
Businesses with strong reviews, high responsiveness, and a well-optimized profile consistently pay less per lead. Google rewards fast response - if you’re letting leads sit for 4 hours because your after-hours lead handling isn’t set up, you’re paying full price for leads you’re not closing.
Offering more services and covering more zip codes can improve your ranking and spread lead costs down. But expanding service area without the capacity to back it up creates a different problem. Most contractors report the sweet spot is 3 - 5 core services in a tight radius before they scale.
One factor that’s easy to overlook: message leads versus phone leads. Message leads generally cost about half what phone leads cost. If you’re only set up to handle calls and you’re ignoring message leads, you’re leaving cheaper inventory on the table.
If you want to understand whether the leads you’re getting are actually converting to booked jobs - not just phone calls - tracking that gap is critical. The website traffic vs. booked jobs breakdown explains how to measure that from end to end.
Building a Budget That Matches Your Trade
Starting from scratch with LSAs means committing to at least 60 - 90 days of data before drawing conclusions. One month of spend at $800 with 12 leads and 2 closed jobs is not a trend - it’s noise.
The contractors who pull back too early are often the ones who had a bad first month because their review count was low or their response time was slow. Fix those variables before you cut the budget. A profile with fewer than 10 reviews is competing at a structural disadvantage regardless of how much you spend.
If you’re running LSAs alongside other paid channels, make sure you’re not double-counting leads. A prospect who finds you through an LSA ad and then visits your website and fills out a form will show up in two places. Tools that track which leads actually convert are essential once you’re spending across multiple channels.
Seasonality also affects your CPL more than most contractors plan for. Summer HVAC and roofing demand spikes in Q2 and Q3 push competition up and CPL with it. Running heavier budgets in shoulder seasons - spring for HVAC tune-ups, late fall for roofing inspections - can get you more leads at lower cost. The seasonal marketing calendar for contractors maps out when to push and when to pull back by trade.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much should a home service contractor spend on Google LSAs per month?
Most small contractors start with $500 - $2,000 per month, which generates roughly 10 - 50 qualified leads depending on trade and location. The minimum recommended budget is 10 - 15 times your average cost per lead - so if you’re paying $65 per lead, plan for at least $650 - $975 a month before expecting consistent volume.
What is the average cost per lead for Google Local Services Ads?
The national average LSA cost per lead is approximately $60, compared to $90.92 for traditional home service search ads, according to LocaliQ’s 2025 analysis of 3,211 campaigns. Individual trades range from $28 for house cleaning up to $80 or more for roofing and HVAC in competitive markets.
Are Google LSAs worth it for small contractors with tight budgets?
Yes, if the math works for your trade. A small plumbing operation spending $1,000 a month at $35 per lead gets roughly 28 leads - at a 20% conversion rate on $500 jobs, that’s $2,800 in revenue from a $1,000 investment. LSA ranking heavily favors review count and responsiveness, which means a small operator with 50 solid reviews can outrank a bigger company that doesn’t respond fast.
Why are my Google LSA lead costs higher than the averages?
Urban markets run 20 - 50% above national averages. New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago contractors routinely see lead costs well above the national baseline, with some trades hitting $100+ per lead. Beyond geography, low review counts, slow response times, and a profile that covers too many loosely-related services can all push your cost per lead up.
How do LSA conversion rates compare to traditional Google Ads?
LSAs convert at 20 - 25% compared to 6 - 8% for traditional PPC, based on aggregated 2024 - 2025 data from agencies managing hundreds of LSA accounts. The pay-per-lead model also filters out a large share of window-shoppers before you ever pay, which is the core reason LSAs tend to outperform PPC on a cost-per-booked-job basis.
Pull your last 90 days of LSA spend, divide it by the number of booked jobs - not leads, booked jobs - and compare that number to your average ticket. If the math isn’t at least 3:1, something in your follow-up process is bleeding money before the lead ever converts. Start there today.
Written by
Pipeline Research Team