Guide · ROAS vs ROI

ROAS vs ROI — What's the Real Difference?

ROAS and ROI both measure campaign performance — but ROAS measures revenue efficiency while ROI measures profitability. A campaign can have excellent ROAS and negative ROI. Understanding the difference, and when each matters, is the foundation of profitable media buying.

Updated May 2026

ROAS and ROI — The Formulas

ROAS — Return on Ad Spend
Revenue ÷ Ad Spend
Measures revenue generated per dollar of advertising spend. A 4× ROAS = $4 revenue for every $1 spent on ads. Does not account for product cost, fulfilment, or overhead. A campaign-level metric.
ROI — Return on Investment
(Revenue − Costs) ÷ Costs × 100%
Measures net profit as a percentage of total investment (ad spend + product cost + overhead). A 50% ROI = $1.50 returned for every $1 invested after all costs. The true profitability measure.
ROAS → ROI conversion
ROI% = (ROAS × Gross Margin% − 1) × 100
Example: 4× ROAS at 50% margin = (4 × 0.5 − 1) × 100 = 100% ROI. Every $1 of ad spend returns $1 of net profit after product cost. At 25% margin: (4 × 0.25 − 1) × 100 = 0% ROI — breaking even despite 4× ROAS. Use the ROAS calculator to model your margin scenarios.

Why ROAS Can Look Great While ROI Is Negative

This is the most important ROAS concept most advertisers miss. ROAS only counts revenue — it ignores the cost of goods sold. A business with 20% gross margin needs 5.0× ROAS just to break even on ad spend, before any overhead is counted.

Gross MarginBreak-Even ROASROAS for 50% ROIROAS for 100% ROI
70% margin1.43×2.14×2.86×
60% margin1.67×2.50×3.33×
50% margin2.0×3.0×4.0×
40% margin2.5×3.75×5.0×
30% margin3.33×5.0×6.67×
20% margin5.0×7.5×10.0×
Calculate your own break-even first

Before using any industry ROAS benchmark, calculate your break-even ROAS: 1 ÷ Gross Margin %. This is your zero-profit floor — every ROAS above this generates gross profit on ad spend; every ROAS below it loses money. Industry averages are irrelevant if your margin structure is different. A finance company with 80% margin has a break-even ROAS of 1.25×; a food delivery service with 15% margin has a break-even of 6.67×.

ROAS Benchmarks by Industry — 2026

IndustryAvg ROASTypical Gross MarginImplied ROIVerdict
Finance & Insurance7.2×70–80%~400–476%Excellent
Legal Services5.8×75–85%~335–393%Excellent
Real Estate5.7×60–70%~242–299%Strong
Travel5.4×35–50%~89–170%Good
Healthcare4.9×50–65%~145–219%Strong
Education4.1×55–70%~126–187%Strong
Ecommerce4.3×40–55%~72–137%Margin-dependent
B2B / SaaS3.8×65–80%~147–204%Strong (high margin)

When to Report ROAS vs ROI

Use ROAS for campaign optimisation

ROAS is the right metric for day-to-day campaign management because it's directly tied to ad spend — you can improve it by adjusting bids, targeting, and creative within the campaign. Target ROAS bidding on Google and Meta uses this metric to automate optimisation. It's fast to calculate and directly actionable within ad platforms. Use ROAS to compare campaigns, ad groups, keywords, and audiences against each other and against your break-even threshold.

Use ROI for business decisions

ROI accounts for all costs — product cost, fulfilment, customer service, agency fees, platform fees, and overhead — and produces the true net return on investment. Use ROI for: deciding whether to scale a channel, comparing digital advertising to other marketing investments, board reporting, and evaluating whether advertising is creating business value or just revenue. A channel with 5× ROAS but 10% net ROI (after all costs) may still be worth scaling, but the decision needs full cost context.

MER — the modern alternative to both

Many sophisticated advertisers now use MER (Marketing Efficiency Ratio): Total Revenue ÷ Total Marketing Spend across all channels. MER avoids attribution debates (which channel gets credit for which conversion) and gives a clean top-line view of marketing productivity. MER above 3.0× is generally considered healthy for e-commerce; above 5.0× is excellent. It complements ROAS (channel-level) and ROI (profitability) as a portfolio-level efficiency metric.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good ROAS for Google Ads?

A good ROAS depends on your gross margin. Calculate your break-even ROAS first: 1 ÷ Gross Margin %. At 50% margin, break-even is 2.0× and "good" is 3.5–5.0×. Industry averages: ecommerce 4.3×, finance 7.2×, travel 5.4×, SaaS 3.8×. These are context, not targets — your margin determines the right number. See What Is a Good ROAS? for the full breakdown.

Can ROAS be high but ROI negative?

Yes. A 3× ROAS at 25% margin = 0% ROI — you're breaking even on product cost with nothing left for overhead. At 20% margin, 3× ROAS means losing money on every sale. ROAS must exceed 1 ÷ Gross Margin % just to cover product cost. Always check ROAS against your margin before declaring a campaign profitable.

How do I improve ROAS without raising bids?

The fastest ROAS levers that don't involve bidding: improve landing page conversion rate (doubles CVR = doubles ROAS at same CPC), increase AOV through upsells or bundles (same CPA at higher order value = better ROAS), improve product mix toward higher-margin items, and use ROAS bidding (Target ROAS) which shifts spend toward high-value customers automatically. Creative improvement that increases CTR and CVR simultaneously is often the single highest-leverage ROAS action available.

Related Tools & Benchmarks