Enter a few numbers to estimate whether Meta (Facebook) ads could generate profitable leads for your service business – in less than 30 seconds
How This Meta Ads Profitability Calculator Works
1. Enter your business numbers
2. Enter your marketing assumptions
3. See your estimated results & decide
* Use rough estimates — the goal is to test your economics.
Based on the numbers you have entered.
Your return multiple shows how much gross profit you generate for every $1 spent on marketing.
You are spending more on marketing than you generate in gross profit. Meta ads are unlikely to work without improving pricing, margins, or close rate.
Technically profitable but fragile.
Small changes in lead quality or close rate could push results below break-even.
Your marketing economics are healthy. With strong creatives and consistent lead quality, Meta ads could become a reliable growth channel.
Your marketing economics are healthy. With strong creatives and consistent lead quality, Meta ads could become a reliable growth channel.
ROAS measures revenue generated for every $1 spent on ads.
Return Multiple measures gross profit generated for every $1 spent on marketing.
For service businesses, this is a more useful metric because it accounts for your close rate, order value, and margins.
Based on your results, here are a few ways to move forward.
Try different values for close rate, CPL, or job value to see how they affect your profitability.
Small improvements in conversion rate or lead cost can dramatically change your results.
Use the CPL sensitivity table below to understand the range where your marketing stays profitable.
Aim to keep your CPL within the green or blue zone for healthy returns.
If your results are close to profitable, improving creative strategy, lead quality, or conversion rates can push your numbers into a healthy range.
See how your meta ads profitability changes at different cost-per-leads (CPL)
Most of your business inputs (AOV, Gross Margin, etc) are largely within your control.
But Cost per lead (CPL) can vary depending on industry, seasonality & your Meta ads creative strategy among other factors.
The table below shows how sensitive your profitability is to CPL changes.
The green and blue rows represent the healthy profitability range.
| CPL | Leads | Customers | Return Multiple |
|---|
⚠️ Run the calculator at the top to generate the CPL sesitivity table
Our team helps service businesses generate consistent, high-quality leads from Meta Ads using our creative-first approach. If your numbers look promising or you’re close, we can help you improve your CPL, lead quality, and conversion rates.
✔ No sales pitch. Promise ✔ 30-min discussion
Many service businesses hear completely opposite opinions about Meta (Facebook) ads.
For some businesses, Meta ads become a consistent source of high-quality leads. For others, they feel like a waste of money.
The difference usually comes down to two things: how customers decide to buy, and whether the economics of your business support paid acquisition.
Some services are driven by urgency.
If a pipe bursts, the AC stops working, or the power goes out, people usually go straight to Google and search for a solution. In these situations, search advertising tends to perform better because customers are actively looking for help.
Other services work very differently.
For services like home remodeling, dental implants, cosmetic treatments, or annual maintenance plans, people often know they have a problem but haven’t taken action yet. They might spend weeks or months researching options, comparing providers, or simply becoming familiar with different solutions.
This is where Meta ads can work extremely well. Instead of waiting for someone to search, Meta ads introduce your service earlier in the decision process and build familiarity over time.
However, even if Meta is the right type of channel for your service, there is a second and more important question:
Do the numbers actually work?
Paid advertising only works when the economics of your business support it.
For service businesses, four variables largely determine whether Meta ads can be profitable.
The higher the value of each customer, the easier it becomes to justify advertising costs. A business that generates $1,500 from a new customer can afford significantly higher acquisition costs than a business with a $150 job value.
Gross margin determines how much profit is available after delivering the service. Businesses with healthy margins have more room to invest in marketing and customer acquisition.
Close rate represents the percentage of leads that become paying customers. Improving lead handling, sales processes, and follow-up systems can dramatically increase the profitability of advertising.
Cost per lead is the average amount spent to generate a potential customer through advertising. This number can vary depending on industry competition, seasonality, targeting, and the quality of your ad creative.
These four variables determine whether Meta ads can become a reliable growth channel for your service business.
The calculator above combines these inputs to estimate your expected leads, customers, and marketing return, helping you understand whether your current economics support paid acquisition.
The goal of advertising is not simply to generate leads — it is to generate profitable customers.
That’s why this calculator focuses on return multiple instead of traditional metrics like ROAS.
Return multiple measures how much gross profit your business generates for every dollar spent on marketing.
Return Multiple = Gross Profit ÷ Total Marketing Cost
This number provides a clearer picture of marketing performance for service businesses because it accounts for your margins rather than just revenue.
Many marketers evaluate advertising performance using ROAS (Return on Ad Spend).
ROAS measures how much revenue is generated for every dollar spent on advertising.
However, revenue alone does not determine profitability — especially for service businesses where margins can vary significantly.
For example:
A campaign generating $3,000 in revenue from $1,000 in ad spend has a 3× ROAS.
But if delivering that service costs $2,400, the actual profit is only $600.
In this scenario, the campaign appears successful based on ROAS, but the true profitability is much lower.
Return Multiple solves this problem by measuring the relationship between gross profit and total marketing cost rather than revenue alone.
Because it accounts for margins, return multiple provides a more realistic way to evaluate marketing performance for service businesses.
Below 1× — Advertising is not profitable
1× to 2× — Results are fragile and may fluctuate month to month
2× to 3× — Campaigns can be viable with careful optimization
3× or higher — Healthy and scalable marketing performance
Because advertising performance can fluctuate from month to month, many service businesses aim for at least a 3× return multiple to maintain a comfortable margin of safety.
The calculator above estimates your expected return multiple based on your business economics and cost per lead assumptions, helping you evaluate whether Meta ads are likely to be sustainable.
Meta ads can be profitable for many service businesses, but it depends on the underlying economics of the business.
Factors such as average job value, gross margin, close rate, and cost per lead determine whether advertising can generate profitable customers.
The calculator above helps estimate these numbers to determine whether Meta ads are likely to work for your business.
There is no universal “good” cost per lead because it depends on the value and profitability of each customer.
For example, a business generating $1,500 per customer can sustain a much higher cost per lead than a business with a $200 job value.
The calculator above estimates the CPL range that keeps your marketing profitable based on your own numbers.
A return multiple measures the gross profit generated for every dollar spent on marketing.
As a general guideline:
• Around 1× return means you are breaking even
• Around 2× return can work but leaves little margin for fluctuation
• 3× or higher is generally a healthier and more scalable range
Many businesses aim for at least a 3× return multiple to maintain a comfortable margin of safety.
ROAS measures revenue generated from advertising, but it does not account for the cost of delivering the service.
For service businesses, profitability depends heavily on margins. A campaign may show strong revenue but still produce little actual profit.
Return multiple focuses on gross profit relative to marketing costs, which provides a more realistic picture of marketing performance.
Yes. Meta ads can work well for many local service businesses, especially when customers spend time researching options or comparing providers.
Examples include home improvement services, cosmetic treatments, dental services, or recurring maintenance plans.
In these cases, exposure and familiarity play a role in the decision process, which makes Meta ads an effective channel.