
How much should a local business spend on marketing? It depends on your revenue, margins, growth goals and competition — not a fixed percentage. A common starting reference is a single-digit percentage of revenue for maintenance and more for aggressive growth, but the right number is whatever produces a positive, measurable return for your business. Tie spend to booked revenue, not vanity metrics.
Start from goals, not a percentage
Decide what growth you want and what a new customer is worth. That tells you what you can afford to spend to acquire one.
Know your numbers
Average deal value, close rate and customer lifetime value determine how much you can profitably invest. Without conversion tracking, you’re guessing.
Balance the mix
Most local businesses benefit from a foundation of SEO and a complete Google Business Profile (compounding, lower ongoing cost) plus paid ads for immediate, high-intent demand.
Avoid common traps
- Spending on ads with no landing-page strategy
- No conversion tracking
- Chasing impressions instead of booked leads
- Long contracts with vague deliverables
Measure return, set realistic expectations
Tie every dollar to outcomes and review regularly. No honest partner guarantees a fixed ROI. See our ROI calculator for an estimate.