
The honest answer is that Google Ads cost whatever you decide to spend. That is not the answer you came for, so here is what businesses actually pay, what drives the number, and how to tell if it is working.
I get asked this on almost every discovery call, and most of the answers floating around online are useless. They either dodge the question or quote a national average that has nothing to do with your business. Let me give you the real version.
Google Ads runs on a pay per click model. You do not pay to show your ad. You pay when someone clicks it. That single fact changes how you should think about cost, because the goal is never cheap clicks. It is profitable ones.
The price of a click depends on your industry. A local home services business might pay two to six dollars per click. A law firm, an insurance broker, or a cosmetic surgeon can pay thirty to seventy dollars per click, because the value of a single new client is so high that everyone bids aggressively. Your cost per click is set by what your competitors are willing to pay, not by Google picking a number.
For most small and mid sized businesses in Orange County, a serious Google Ads budget starts around fifteen hundred dollars a month and runs up to ten thousand or more. Below about a thousand a month you usually cannot gather enough data to optimize, so the account never gets good. Above that, the question becomes how much profitable volume you can handle.
On top of ad spend there is management. A good agency charges a flat monthly fee to build, run, and optimize the campaigns. I am not a fan of charging a percentage of spend, because it quietly rewards the agency for spending more of your money. A flat fee keeps everyone honest.
Cheap clicks are easy. Profitable clicks are the entire job.
Stop watching clicks and impressions. They feel like progress and tell you almost nothing. The two numbers that matter are your cost per lead and your return on ad spend. If you are spending four thousand a month and booking thirty qualified leads that close at a rate that makes you money, the budget is correct, full stop. If you are spending the same and getting noise, the budget is not the problem. The account is.
That is the part most business owners miss. The amount you spend matters far less than how well the account is built and managed. I have seen two thousand a month outperform ten thousand a month, because one account was dialed in and the other was on autopilot.
Free 15-minute discovery call. No pitch, no strings. Just three things I'd fix first for your business.