Compare paid and organic customer acquisition costs side by side. See efficiency ratios, organic savings, and optimal channel allocation for your store.
Understanding the difference between paid and organic customer acquisition costs is essential for budgeting and sustainable growth. Paid channels (Google Ads, Meta Ads, TikTok Ads) provide immediate traffic but cost more per customer. Organic channels (SEO, content, social, email) require upfront investment but deliver customers at significantly lower ongoing costs.
This calculator lets you input spend and customer counts for both paid and organic channels, then compares the two side by side. It shows the cost difference, the organic efficiency multiplier, and how much you save by investing in organic. It also calculates what would happen if you shifted budget between the two.
Most successful e-commerce brands build a strong organic foundation and scale paid acquisition on top of it. This calculator helps you find the right balance between the two approaches. Whether you are a beginner or experienced professional, this free online tool provides instant, reliable results without manual computation.
Most merchants over-invest in paid and under-invest in organic. This calculator quantifies the difference and shows how much cheaper organic customers are. Use it to build a case for content marketing, SEO, and email investment alongside your paid campaigns. Having a precise figure at your fingertips empowers better planning and more confident decisions.
Paid CAC = Paid Spend / Paid Customers Organic CAC = Organic Spend / Organic Customers Efficiency Ratio = Paid CAC / Organic CAC Organic Savings = (Paid CAC − Organic CAC) × Organic Customers
Result: Paid CAC: $100.00 | Organic CAC: $15.00 | Efficiency Ratio: 6.7×
Paid CAC = $15,000 / 150 = $100. Organic CAC = $3,000 / 200 = $15. Organic is 6.7× more efficient. The organic savings = ($100 − $15) × 200 = $17,000 — that's how much more you would have spent acquiring those organic customers through paid channels.
Organic marketing creates assets that appreciate over time. Each piece of content, every email subscriber, and all SEO rankings compound — delivering more value each month at the same or lower cost. Paid advertising is the opposite: you rent attention, and when the budget stops, so does the traffic.
Start by investing in SEO content targeting high-intent keywords, building an email list for retention marketing, and creating social media content that drives engagement. Track organic CAC monthly. Within 6–12 months, you should see organic CAC declining as content gains traction.
Use paid ads to supplement organic when you need predictable growth, during product launches, seasonal peaks, or when testing new markets. Keep paid CAC within your target LTV:CAC ratio, and continuously test creative and audiences to keep costs efficient.
Organic spend includes SEO tools, content creation costs (writers, designers, video), email marketing platform fees, social media management tools, and a portion of marketing team salaries dedicated to non-paid activities. It's not zero — it's just usually much lower per customer than paid.
Organic content continues to generate traffic long after it's created. A blog post or YouTube video can bring customers for years with no incremental cost. Paid ads stop generating traffic the moment you stop paying. This compounding effect makes organic dramatically cheaper over time.
No. Organic takes months to build momentum and has limited scalability in the short term. Paid ads provide immediate, predictable traffic. The optimal strategy invests heavily in organic for long-term efficiency while using paid for short-term growth targets and seasonal pushes.
Use UTM parameters for all paid traffic, and rely on Google Analytics channel groupings. Last-click attribution is simplest. Multi-touch attribution is more accurate but complex. At minimum, separate customers with ad-related UTMs from those arriving through organic search, direct, or email channels.
An efficiency ratio of 3× to 10× is typical, meaning paid customers cost 3 to 10 times more than organic. If the ratio exceeds 10×, paid may be too expensive or organic is underinvested. If it's under 3×, your organic program may have inflated costs.
Paid brand awareness campaigns (display, video) often drive customers who later convert through organic or direct channels. This can make organic CAC appear lower and paid CAC higher than reality. Use an assisted conversion model or brand lift study for more accurate attribution.