Advertising & ROAS
ROAS vs Break-even ROAS: When Are Your Ads Profitable?
Master return on ad spend for SaaS and B2B: ROAS formula, break-even calculation, channel benchmarks, and how to set profitable ad targets.
Return on Ad Spend (ROAS) is the standard metric for evaluating paid advertising performance. But ROAS alone can be misleading, a 4:1 ROAS looks great until you realize your gross margin is only 15%. This guide covers ROAS, break-even ROAS, and how to set targets that actually drive profit.
How to use the calculators
ROAS Calculator
- Open the ROAS Calculator.
- Enter revenue attributed to your ads (match your attribution window).
- Enter total ad spend for the same period.
- Compare your ROAS to break-even ROAS (1 ÷ gross margin) for true profitability.
Break-even ROAS Calculator
- Open the Break-even ROAS Calculator.
- Enter your gross margin percentage.
- Optionally add additional variable costs (fulfillment, fees, etc.).
- Use the break-even ROAS as your floor, any ROAS below this loses money on COGS.
ROAS formula
ROAS = Revenue from Ads ÷ Ad Spend
A ROAS of 4:1 means you generate $4 in revenue for every $1 spent on advertising.
Example
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Ad spend | $50,000 |
| Revenue attributed to ads | $200,000 |
| ROAS | 4:1 |
Use our ROAS Calculator.
ROAS vs ROI vs CPA
| Metric | Formula | What it measures |
|---|---|---|
| ROAS | Revenue ÷ Ad spend | Top-line revenue efficiency |
| ROI | (Revenue − Cost) ÷ Cost | Profit as % of investment |
| CPA | Ad spend ÷ Conversions | Cost per acquisition event |
ROAS is preferred for campaign optimization because ad platforms report revenue directly. ROI is better for overall profitability analysis.
Break-even ROAS
Break-even ROAS is the minimum ROAS needed to cover your cost of goods sold (not profit, just covering product delivery costs):
Break-even ROAS = 1 ÷ Gross Margin
| Gross margin | Break-even ROAS |
|---|---|
| 20% | 5:1 |
| 40% | 2.5:1 |
| 50% | 2:1 |
| 70% | 1.43:1 |
| 80% | 1.25:1 |
Example
A SaaS product with 75% gross margin:
- Break-even ROAS = 1 ÷ 0.75 = 1.33:1
- Any ROAS above 1.33:1 covers COGS
- But you still need to cover CAC from sales, marketing overhead, and R&D
Use our Break-even ROAS Calculator.
Setting profitable ROAS targets
Break-even ROAS covers COGS only. For true profitability, add a buffer:
Target ROAS = Break-even ROAS × (1 + desired profit margin)
Or more practically for SaaS:
| Goal | Target ROAS (at 75% margin) |
|---|---|
| Cover COGS only | 1.33:1 |
| Cover COGS + 20% buffer | 1.6:1 |
| Cover full CAC + COGS | Depends on CAC/ACV ratio |
For subscription businesses, a single ad click rarely maps to one month’s revenue. Consider:
- First-month ROAS: immediate return (often low for SaaS)
- 90-day ROAS: accounts for trial-to-paid conversion
- LTV-based ROAS: revenue over customer lifetime vs. ad spend
LTV-based ROAS is the most accurate for SaaS but requires attribution modeling.
ROAS benchmarks by channel
| Channel | Typical ROAS range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Google Search (brand) | 5:1 – 15:1 | High intent, lower volume |
| Google Search (non-brand) | 2:1 – 5:1 | Competitive, varies by keyword |
| LinkedIn Ads | 1.5:1 – 4:1 | B2B, higher CPMs |
| Meta / Facebook | 2:1 – 6:1 | Better for PLG / lower ACV |
| Display / retargeting | 3:1 – 8:1 | Warm audiences |
Benchmarks are directional. Your break-even ROAS is the real threshold.
ROAS for SaaS vs e-commerce
| Factor | E-commerce | SaaS |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue timing | Immediate | Delayed (trial, sales cycle) |
| Repeat purchases | Per transaction | Subscription (recurring) |
| True value metric | First-order ROAS | LTV-based ROAS |
| Attribution window | 7–30 days | 30–90+ days |
SaaS advertisers often under-report ROAS because they measure too short an attribution window. A lead that converts 60 days later won’t appear in a 7-day ROAS report.
Improving ROAS
- Tighten targeting: exclude low-intent audiences
- Improve landing pages: higher conversion = better ROAS
- Optimize for downstream events: optimize ads for trials or qualified leads, not just clicks
- Use LTV-weighted bidding: feed conversion values based on customer quality
- Cut underperforming campaigns: reallocate to top quartile
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Consequence |
|---|---|
| Celebrating ROAS above 1:1 | May still be unprofitable after margins |
| Ignoring gross margin | Wrong break-even target |
| Short attribution windows | Under-credits ad performance |
| Gross revenue without returns | Overstates ROAS |
| Not segmenting by campaign type | Brand vs. non-brand have different targets |
ROAS in the growth metrics stack
ROAS connects to the broader metrics framework:
- **CAC: ROAS helps evaluate top-of-funnel efficiency
- **LTV: true ad profitability requires LTV, not first-touch revenue
- **Funnel metrics: ROAS × conversion rates = pipeline
- **Budget planning: ROAS informs spend allocation
Key takeaways
- ROAS = revenue from ads ÷ ad spend
- Break-even ROAS = 1 ÷ gross margin
- Always compare ROAS to break-even, not to arbitrary benchmarks
- For SaaS, use LTV-weighted ROAS with appropriate attribution windows
- Segment by channel and campaign type for actionable insights