How much budget is enough to start Google Ads for small business?
Starting with Google Ads for a small business doesnât have a one-size-fits-all budget, but hereâs a practical guide to figure out how much you should plan to spend based on your goals, industry, and testing needs.
đĄ 1. Minimum Recommended Budget
For most small businesses, a starter budget is:
$500â$1,500 per month
This gives Google Ads enough data to:
optimize audience targeting
see which ads and landing pages perform best
With too little spend, Google canât properly learn what works, and your campaigns may not deliver useful results.
Think of your first month as an investment in learning and optimization, not necessarily revenue.
đ° 2. How Budget Breaks Down
â Daily Budget
Google encourages setting a daily budget per campaign:
$10â$50/day per campaign
If you run multiple campaigns (e.g., search + display), multiply accordingly.
đ 3. Factors That Affect How Much You Need
đ Industry & Competition
Competitive industries (finance, insurance, legal, etc.) often require higher budgets because cost per click (CPC) is higher.
Local businesses (e.g., cafĂŠs, salons) usually get results with lower budgets.
Brand Awareness: generally lower CPC but may require more impressions.
Lead Generation or Sales: higher CPC but higher value per conversion.
đ§Ş Testing & Learning Phase
In the first 4â6 weeks, you should allocate 30â50% of your budget to testing:
đ 5. How to Decide YOUR Budget (Simple Framework)
e.g., each lead is worth $50
Estimate Cost Per Click (CPC)
Starting with Google Ads for a small business doesnât have a one-size-fits-all budget, but hereâs a practical guide to figure out how much you should plan to spend based on your goals, industry, and testing needs.
đĄ 1. Minimum Recommended Budget
For most small businesses, a starter budget is:
$500â$1,500 per month
This gives Google Ads enough data to:
optimize audience targeting
see which ads and landing pages perform best
With too little spend, Google canât properly learn what works, and your campaigns may not deliver useful results.
Think of your first month as an investment in learning and optimization, not necessarily revenue.
đ° 2. How Budget Breaks Down
â Daily Budget
Google encourages setting a daily budget per campaign:
$10â$50/day per campaign
If you run multiple campaigns (e.g., search + display), multiply accordingly.
đ 3. Factors That Affect How Much You Need
đ Industry & Competition
Competitive industries (finance, insurance, legal, etc.) often require higher budgets because cost per click (CPC) is higher.
Local businesses (e.g., cafĂŠs, salons) usually get results with lower budgets.
Brand Awareness: generally lower CPC but may require more impressions.
Lead Generation or Sales: higher CPC but higher value per conversion.
đ§Ş Testing & Learning Phase
In the first 4â6 weeks, you should allocate 30â50% of your budget to testing:
đ Tips to Stretch Your Budget
â
Start with high-intent keywords (lower waste)
â
Use location targeting (so you only pay for local customers)
â
Install conversion tracking (so you can measure whatâs working)
â
Use ad scheduling (show ads only at converting times)
â
Focus on one campaign at a time to avoid splitting your budget
A small business should start with at least $500â$1,500 per month on Google Ads.
This gives your campaigns enough budget to test, learn, optimize, and begin generating results.
If you want, tell me your business type, location, and goals, and I can estimate a custom Google Ads budget for you.