Calculate your cost per acquisition from ad spend and conversions. Plan budgets with target CPA mode to forecast spend for desired conversion volume.
Cost per acquisition (CPA) tells you how much you spend on advertising to generate a single conversion — whether that's a purchase, a sign-up, a download, or any other valuable action. It's arguably the most important metric for performance marketers because it directly connects ad spend to business outcomes.
This CPA calculator divides your total ad spend by the number of conversions to reveal your true cost of acquiring each customer or lead. It also includes a target CPA planning mode where you enter your desired CPA and conversion goal to calculate the budget needed.
Understanding CPA in context is essential. A $50 CPA is excellent for a product with a $500 lifetime value but terrible for a $20 product. Always evaluate CPA alongside customer lifetime value, average order value, and profit margins to determine whether your advertising is truly profitable.
Understanding this metric in precise terms allows marketing professionals to set realistic goals, track progress effectively, and refine their approach based on real performance data.
CPA is the bridge between ad spend and revenue. Without it, you're flying blind — you might know your CPC and click volume, but you won't know whether those clicks are generating profitable customers. This calculator helps marketers, agency professionals, and business owners quickly assess campaign profitability and plan budgets around concrete conversion targets.
CPA = Total Ad Spend ÷ Total Conversions Reverse: Required Budget = Target CPA × Desired Conversions
Result: $66.67 CPA
With $5,000 in ad spend generating 75 conversions, your CPA is $5,000 ÷ 75 = $66.67. If your average order value is $200 with 30% margins, your profit per sale is $60. At $66.67 CPA, you're slightly above break-even and should optimize to reduce CPA below $60.
CPA is the north-star metric for performance marketers because it directly measures the efficiency of turning ad dollars into business outcomes. Unlike vanity metrics like impressions or clicks, CPA tells you whether your campaigns are actually generating value.
CPA varies enormously by industry and conversion type. E-commerce averages $45–$65 for a purchase, SaaS companies see $50–$200 for a free trial sign-up, and B2B lead generation CPAs range from $50–$500+ depending on deal size. Always benchmark against your own profit margins rather than industry averages.
CPA is a function of CPC and conversion rate: CPA = CPC ÷ Conversion Rate. To lower CPA, you can either reduce what you pay per click or increase the percentage of visitors who convert. Often, landing page optimization yields faster CPA improvements than bid adjustments.
Google Ads, Facebook, and other platforms offer automated target CPA bidding. These algorithms use machine learning to adjust bids in real-time based on the likelihood of conversion. They work best with sufficient conversion data (30+ conversions per month) and realistic target CPAs.
A good CPA depends on your profit per conversion. If your average order value is $100 with 40% margins, your maximum CPA for profitability is $40. E-commerce companies often target CPAs between $10–$50, while B2B SaaS companies may accept $200+ CPAs for high-value contracts.
CPA measures cost per conversion in a specific ad campaign. CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) includes all marketing and sales expenses divided by new customers. CPA is a subset of CAC — your total CAC will always be equal to or higher than your best campaign CPA.
Target CPA bidding works well when you have at least 30–50 conversions per month per campaign. It lets Google's algorithm optimize bids automatically. Start with a target CPA slightly above your current average, then gradually lower it as the algorithm learns.
High CPA usually stems from low conversion rates, high CPCs, or both. Check your landing page experience, ad relevance, targeting accuracy, and offer competitiveness. Sometimes a high CPA indicates you're targeting the wrong audience or keywords.
Improve conversion rates through better landing pages, stronger calls-to-action, and faster page loads. Lower CPC through Quality Score improvements. Refine targeting to exclude low-intent audiences. Test different ad creatives and offers.
Absolutely. Many businesses see lower CPAs on weekdays vs weekends (or vice versa). Use dayparting reports to identify your best-performing times and adjust bid modifiers accordingly. B2B campaigns often perform better Tuesday through Thursday.
Attribution models determine which ad gets credit for a conversion. Last-click attribution may show a lower CPA for bottom-funnel campaigns while ignoring awareness campaigns that assisted. Consider using data-driven or position-based attribution for a more accurate picture.
CPA measures cost per conversion regardless of conversion value. ROAS measures revenue per dollar of ad spend. If all conversions have equal value, they tell a similar story. But if order values vary, ROAS gives a fuller picture of profitability.