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ROAS That Actually Pays: How to Calculate the Right Return on Ad Spend for Your Business – Lapen’s Lab

By Lapen’s Lab  |  Digital Marketing  |  April 2026

📖 Guide  |  Available now for $14.99

ROAS That Actually Pays: How to Calculate the Right Return on Ad Spend for Your Business

A 5x ROAS sounds great. But if your product costs 60% of revenue to produce and deliver, a 5x ROAS might be losing you money. Understanding what ROAS you actually need — not what sounds impressive — is the most important calculation in paid advertising.

ROAS (Return on Ad Spend) is the most commonly cited advertising metric and the most commonly misunderstood. Most advertisers treat a high ROAS as proof their ads are profitable, without ever checking whether that ROAS actually covers their costs and generates real profit. This guide fixes that.

What ROAS actually measures (and what it doesn’t)

ROAS measures revenue generated per dollar spent on ads. A 4x ROAS means you generated $4 in revenue for every $1 in ad spend. What ROAS does NOT measure: profit. It says nothing about your cost of goods, fulfilment costs, platform fees, team costs, or any other expense. A business with thin margins can lose money at 5x ROAS. A business with high margins can be highly profitable at 2x ROAS.

How to calculate YOUR break-even ROAS

This is the most important calculation you’ll do in advertising:

Step 1: Calculate your gross margin percentage. Gross margin = (Revenue – Cost of Goods Sold) ÷ Revenue. For a $50 digital product that costs $5 to deliver, gross margin = ($50 – $5) ÷ $50 = 90%.
Step 2: Calculate break-even ROAS. Break-even ROAS = 1 ÷ Gross Margin. For 90% margin: 1 ÷ 0.90 = 1.11x. For 50% margin: 1 ÷ 0.50 = 2x. For 30% margin: 1 ÷ 0.30 = 3.33x.
Step 3: Add your profit target. If you want a 20% profit margin on ad spend, your target ROAS = 1 ÷ (Gross Margin – 0.20). For 90% margin with 20% profit target: 1 ÷ (0.90 – 0.20) = 1.43x.
Step 4: Include all variable costs. Don’t forget payment processing fees (typically 2-3%), returns/refunds (industry average 5-15% for digital products), and any customer service costs. Adjust your gross margin calculation to include these.

Why your target ROAS might be lower than you think

Most digital product businesses with healthy margins have break-even ROAS thresholds much lower than the “4-5x” figures commonly quoted online. This means:

  • A campaign producing “only” 2x ROAS might be highly profitable if your margins are high
  • Killing campaigns that produce above break-even ROAS is leaving profitable sales on the table
  • Chasing a 5x ROAS target when 2x covers costs and produces profit means running fewer ads than you profitably could
The LTV adjustment: If your customers buy more than once, factor in Customer Lifetime Value. If your average customer spends $150 over their lifetime and your first product costs $50, your effective margin on the first sale is higher when you account for future purchases. Many businesses can afford to acquire customers at a loss on the first transaction because repeat purchases make the relationship profitable.

The ROAS dashboard: what to track and when

MetricHow oftenDecision trigger
Daily ROASDailyBudget pacing only — don’t make strategic decisions on single days
7-day ROASWeeklyCreative decisions: scale winners, kill consistent losers
30-day ROASMonthlyCampaign strategy: audience, budget allocation, channel mix
Blended ROAS (all spend)MonthlyOverall marketing health: are total marketing costs justified by total revenue?

Common ROAS mistakes and how to fix them

  • Comparing your ROAS to industry averages: Irrelevant — your break-even ROAS depends on your margins, not your industry
  • Using platform-reported ROAS as gospel: Platform attribution is imperfect. Use UTM tracking and your own revenue data to validate
  • Ignoring blended ROAS: A single campaign’s ROAS can look great while overall marketing efficiency declines. Track total marketing spend vs total revenue monthly
  • Not adjusting for returns: If 10% of sales are refunded, your effective ROAS is 10% lower than reported

The Bottom Line

The right ROAS for your business is not 4x or 5x or any other number you’ve seen quoted online. It’s the number calculated from your specific margins, costs, and profit targets. Calculate it once. Use it as your decision framework for every campaign. Let the math — not the benchmarks — guide your ad strategy.

Ready to run ads that actually pay?

Our ROAS that Actually Pays guide gives you every calculation, framework, and decision tool you need to set the right ROAS targets for your specific business — and optimise every campaign toward profitable, sustainable growth. Use code LAUNCH20 for 20% off.

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