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Local Service Ads vs Google Ads: which should trades use in 2026?

Both put you at the top of search results. Both can work. They cost very different amounts and convert very differently — and most service businesses pick the wrong one first. Here's the honest comparison: pros, cons, cost-per-lead expectations, and the decision rule.

April 30, 2026 · 9 min read · Paid Media
Local Service Ads vs Google Ads: Which Should Trades Use?

The two paid search options for local service businesses look similar from the outside — both appear at the top of Google when someone searches "plumber near me." Underneath, they're built completely differently, charge differently, and produce different lead quality. Most operators run them with no clear strategy and waste 30–50% of the spend in the first six months. This is the framework to pick one or both, and run them well.

The 30-second difference

Local Service Ads (LSAs) are pay-per-lead. Google charges you only when a customer calls or messages you through the ad. They show at the very top of search, above regular Google Ads, with photos and the Google Guaranteed badge. To run them, you have to complete a verification process — license check, insurance check, background checks for the owner and field staff.

Google Ads (the "Search Network") is pay-per-click. You bid on keywords; you pay every time someone clicks your ad whether they call you or not. They appear below LSAs but above the organic map pack. There's no verification required.

Both are useful. They're not interchangeable.

The honest pros and cons

Local Service Ads — pros

Local Service Ads — cons

Google Ads — pros

Google Ads — cons

What you'll actually pay

Rough cost-per-lead ranges for trades in mid-to-large US markets:

Local service business owner comparing advertising options on a laptop
Choosing between LSAs and Google Ads depends on your market and margin

Your numbers will depend on market competition, your reviews, and (huge factor) your booking rate on the leads you receive. A business that books 40% of inbound LSA leads has a fundamentally different economics than one that books 15%, even at identical ad costs. That's why we always tell operators to fix the leak side of the funnel before scaling ad spend — try the free Lead Leakage Calculator to see what you might be losing on inbound leads you already have.

The decision rule

Honest framework, ordered by what's worked across audits:

Ad performance dashboard showing cost-per-lead data for a trades business
Track cost per booked job — not just clicks — to know which channel is working
  1. If your category has LSAs, start there. Lower cost per acquired job for most trades, faster to set up, less day-to-day management.
  2. Get to 25+ reviews and a 4.7+ rating before scaling LSA budget. Below that, your impressions are too low to justify the budget.
  3. Add Google Ads once you've maxed LSA volume — i.e., raising LSA budget no longer increases lead count. That's your saturation point in your geo.
  4. Run Google Ads for niches LSAs don't cover: long-tail informational ("how to fix a sump pump"), commercial services not in LSA categories, or specialty work where you want very specific keyword control.
  5. Keep both running once you cross ~$5K/month combined. The portfolio is more stable than either channel alone, and the data improves both.
What's working in 2026
For most home-service trades in mid-to-large US markets, LSAs are producing 30–50% lower cost-per-acquired-job than Google Ads. The catch: LSAs reward brands with strong reviews and fast response. If your Google Business Profile isn't tuned and your lead response is slow, the cost advantage disappears.

Five common mistakes

1. Running both at the same time without separating budgets. Cannibalization is real. If you're running both, separate the keyword targeting (LSAs cover branded categories; Google Ads covers long-tail and informational queries) and split the budget so you can compare cost-per-acquired-job.

2. Not enabling lead disputes on LSAs. Google credits clearly bad leads, but only if you flag them. Most operators don't. Build it into your weekly process — review the previous week's leads on Tuesday and dispute the obvious ones.

3. Pointing Google Ads at the homepage. Generic homepage lands convert at 2–4%. Dedicated service-specific landing pages convert at 6–15%. The math compounds — every CPC dollar you spend pointing at a generic page is partially wasted.

4. No after-hours coverage. 30–45% of inbound leads come outside business hours. If those leads ring out or sit overnight, your effective cost-per-acquired-job doubles. Cover after-hours before scaling either channel.

5. Scaling spend without fixing the funnel underneath. Doubling ad spend on a funnel that converts 15% of leads is just doubling waste. Get conversion to 30%+ first, then scale. The economics flip.

Mini-comparison: same brand, both channels

A mid-market HVAC operator we worked with last year ran both channels at $4K/month each for a quarter. The numbers, smoothed across the 90 days:

LSAs delivered ~2× the booked jobs at less than half the cost-per-job. Google Ads still produced revenue, but on a slower cycle and at a higher cost. The right move was scaling LSAs harder and reallocating Google Ads spend to specific commercial-service campaigns the LSAs didn't cover.

Common questions

How long does Google Guaranteed verification take? 2–6 weeks. License and insurance go fast; background checks for the owner and field staff are the slowdown.

Do reviews from other platforms count for LSAs? Only Google reviews. Yelp, Facebook, BBB, and Angi reviews don't feed LSA ranking.

Can I pause LSAs on weekends? Yes, you can set hours by day. Most trades benefit from running them weekends — that's when emergency demand peaks for plumbing and HVAC.

Should I bid on my own brand name in Google Ads? Usually yes if competitors are bidding on your name. If they're not, organic plus your LSA covers it for free.


If you want help deciding between LSAs and Google Ads, or want a written audit of your current paid setup, the Revenue Recovery Audit includes a paid-media review across both channels. Or run the Lead Leakage Calculator first — most operators discover the funnel leaks downstream of paid are bigger than the channel choice itself. Related reading: how to rank in the Google map pack, the post that explains the organic side of the same real estate.