- London's competition is a sign of massive demand. The trick isn't to outspend everyone, it's to out-think them with precision targeting. Forget broad campaigns; they're a bonfire for your cash.
- The biggest reason Google Ads fail in London has nothing to do with Google. It's your website. If it's slow, untrustworthy, or confusing, you're paying for clicks that can never convert. Fix your digital shopfront first.
- Hyperlocal is the only way to win. Stop targeting "London" and start targeting postcodes and boroughs. Don't bid on "electrician"; bid on "emergency electrician Clapham" or "EICR certificate Wandsworth". Intent is everything.
- This guide includes an interactive London Cost Per Lead calculator. Use it to get a realistic idea of your potential costs before you risk a single penny of your hard-earned money.
- A positive return is entirely possible, but only with a focused, ruthless strategy. This guide breaks down exactly how to build one, from keywords to ad copy that actually works on Londoners.
Worried about Google Ads in London? Good. You should be. It's a bloodbath out there if you don't know what you're doing. I've seen countless local businesses pour their marketing budget into the platform and get absolutely nothing back but a big bill and a headache. They see the competition, panic, bid on everything, and wonder why their phone isn't ringing.
But here's the thing everyone gets wrong: the competition isn't the problem. It's a symptom of the real prize – a city packed with millions of people actively searching for your exact service. The problem is that most business owners approach London like it's one big city. It's not. It's a collection of dozens of distinct towns and villages, each with its own character and customer base. The person searching for a plumber in Richmond has very different expectations from someone in Hackney.
Getting a return on your investment here isn't about having the deepest pockets. It's about being smarter, more targeted, and more relevant than the bigger players who are just carpet-bombing the entire M25 with generic ads. It's entirely possible to carve out a very profitable niche for yourself, but you have to throw out the standard playbook.
So, is Google Ads just a money pit for small businesses in London?
Honestly, for most, yes it is. But only because they make the same predictable mistakes. They set up a campaign, chuck in a few broad keywords like "builder London" or "cleaner", point it at their homepage, and hope for the best. That's not a strategy; it's gambling. And the house always wins.
The myth is that you need a budget like a FTSE 100 company to compete. You don't. A small, hyper-focused budget of even £1,000 a month can work wonders if every penny is aimed at the right person, in the right place, at the exact moment they need you. I remember one campaign we ran for a home cleaning company where we got their cost per lead down to just £5. For local businesses, you can achieve these kinds of results simply by focusing on a few specific boroughs and writing ads that speak to local homeowners, rather than targeting the entire city.
The contrarian truth is that Google Ads is probably the best platform for most local service businesses. Unlike social media, where you're interrupting someone's day, you're showing up at the precise moment they have a problem and are actively looking for a solution. Their boiler has packed in, they've got a leak, or they need a solicitor fast. They aren't scrolling Instagram; they're typing into Google. Being there, at that moment, is incredibly powerful. But people often get overwhelmed and end up wasting a lot of money on campaigns that just aren't set up for the London market.
How much should I actually be spending to get results?
This is the first question everyone asks, and the answer is always "it depends". But I can give you a realistic starting point. For most local services in London, I'd suggest having a minimum ad spend of £1,000 - £2,000 a month to get enough data and see what's working. Anything less and you're just not gathering information fast enough to make smart decisions.
But the budget itself is just a number. What really matters is how it connects to your business goals. The simple formula is: Ad Spend = (Number of Leads You Want) x (Your Cost Per Lead).
The big unknown there is your Cost Per Lead (CPL). This can vary massively. We're running a campaign for an HVAC company in a very competitive area, and their leads are around $60. On the other hand, the home cleaning company I mentioned was getting leads for £5. In London, for trades like electricians, plumbers, or decorators, you could be looking at anything from £20 to £80 per qualified lead, depending on how competitive your specific trade and area is.
The key is to understand what a lead is worth to you. If your average job is worth £1,500, paying £60 for a lead that you have a 1 in 3 chance of closing is a brilliant investment. To help you get a feel for the numbers, I've built a simple calculator below. Play around with it to see how different conversion rates and click costs can affect your CPL.
London Lead Cost Estimator
Estimate your potential Cost Per Lead (CPL) by adjusting your expected average Cost Per Click (CPC) and your website's conversion rate. This shows how vital a good website is for keeping lead costs down.
What kind of click costs are we talking for different industries?
The Cost Per Click (CPC) is the first half of the CPL equation, and it's driven by competition. In London, some sectors are notoriously expensive. Anything in finance, law, or insurance will have you paying a premium for every click. But for local service businesses, it's a bit more varied. A click for a "man with a van" might be a couple of quid, whereas a click for an "emergency commercial plumber" could easily be over £10 or £15.
It's all about the potential value of the customer. The more a lead is worth, the more your competitors are willing to pay for it, which drives up the auction price for everyone. The chart below gives you a rough idea of what you might expect to pay per click for a few common local business types in London. These aren't exact figures, but they're based on what we typically see in the market. Notice the range – the lower end is for less urgent, more general searches, while the higher end is for those "I need someone now" emergency keywords.
Typical London CPC Ranges
By Local Service Industry
Avg. Emergency Trade CPC
Okay, so how do I target people without blowing my budget?
This is where the magic happens. You win in London not by outspending, but by being ruthlessly specific. Your goal is to show your ad only to people who are your perfect customer, and located right on your doorstep.
1. Go Hyper-Local: Stop targeting "London". It's useless. Instead, use radius targeting. If you're based in Balham, set a 3 or 5-mile radius around your address. That covers Clapham, Wandsworth, Tooting, Streatham – your core service area. You can even target specific postcodes. This instantly cuts out 95% of the competition and ensures every click is from someone you can actually service profitability.
2. Master Keyword Intent: This is the most important skill in Google Ads. You need to get inside your customer's head. What are they typing when they have an urgent, expensive problem?
- -> Bad Keyword: "plumbing". This is too broad. It could be someone looking for a course, a job, or a DIY guide.
- -> Good Keyword: "plumber near me". Better, shows local intent.
- -> Excellent Keyword: "emergency boiler repair fulham". This is pure gold. The user has a specific, urgent problem, and has told you their location. This is a person who is ready to pay.
3. The Power of Negative Keywords: Just as important as telling Google who to show ads to, is telling it who not to show them to. Every local business should have a standard list of negative keywords like "free", "cheap", "DIY", "course", "training", "jobs", "salary". Every time your ad shows for one of these, you're wasting money. Regularly check your 'Search Terms' report to find more irrelevant terms people are using and add them to your negative list. This is the simplest way to stop your budget being drained by completely wrong traffic.
4. Use Ad Scheduling: If you only answer the phone from 9am to 5pm, why are your ads running at 2am? It's a waste. Schedule your ads to only run during your business hours, or the hours you have someone ready to take a call. For emergency services, you might run 24/7, but you can still bid higher during peak hours and lower overnight.
What does a winning local campaign structure even look like?
A messy account structure is a leaky bucket for your budget. A clean, logical structure lets you control where your money goes and ensures your ads are always hyper-relevant to the searcher. For a local service business, I always recommend a structure based on your core services.
Think of it as a funnel. The user has a journey, and you need to guide them smoothly from search to sale. Any friction along the way, and they're gone.
The Local Service Conversion Funnel
Here’s how to structure your account to match that journey:
Campaign Level: Create one campaign for each main service you offer. For an electrician, this might be:
- Campaign 1: Emergency Call-Outs
- Campaign 2: EICR & Landlord Certs
- Campaign 3: Rewiring & Installs
Ad Group Level: Inside each campaign, create tightly-themed Ad Groups. For the "EICR" campaign, you might have:
- Ad Group 1: EICR Keywords (e.g., "eicr certificate", "electrical safety certificate")
- Ad Group 2: Landlord Keywords (e.g., "landlord electrical certificate london")
- Ad Group 3: Location-Specific (e.g., "eicr islington", "electrical report hackney")
My ads are getting clicks, but my phone isn't ringing. What gives?
I see this every single week. A frustrated business owner comes to me and says "Google Ads doesn't work. I spent £800 and got a lot of clicks but only one phone call."
Let me be brutally honest: In 99% of these cases, the problem isn't Google. It's your website. You are paying good money to bring potential customers to a digital shopfront that is confusing, untrustworthy, and slow. It's like paying for a glossy advert in a magazine and then giving the address to a boarded-up shop.
Have a proper, objective look at your website, particularly on a mobile phone.
- -> Is your phone number massive and clickable at the very top of the page? Most local searchers are on their mobiles and want to call someone immediately. Don't make them hunt for it.
- -> Is there a simple contact form for people who don't want to call? Make it as easy as possible for them to give you their details.
- -> Does it load instantly? If your site takes more than 3 seconds to load, half of your potential customers have already gone.
- -> Does it look professional and trustworthy? Are there spelling mistakes? Are the images blurry? People are inviting you into their homes or businesses; they need to feel confident you're a legitimate operation.
- -> Where is the social proof? You need reviews. Testimonials. Logos of certifications (NICEIC, Gas Safe). Links to your Checkatrade or Trustpilot profiles. Without these, you're just another anonymous website.
How do I write an ad that actually gets clicked by Londoners?
Your ad has about two seconds to grab someone's attention and convince them you're the right choice. In a competitive market like London, generic copy gets ignored. Your ad needs to scream "I'm local, I'm reliable, and I can solve your problem right now."
Use this simple structure for your headlines:
Headline 1: Match The User's Search. If they searched for "Emergency Plumber Islington", your headline should be "Emergency Plumber in Islington". This instantly tells them they're in the right place.
Headline 2: Give A Key Benefit or Trust Signal. "24/7 Call Out | Gas Safe Registered" or "No Call-Out Fee | 5-Star Reviews". What is the single most important thing they need to know?
Headline 3: Reinforce Your Location or Offer. "Serving North London for 20 Years" or "Call Now For A Free Quote".
For the description, use the classic Problem-Agitate-Solve formula:
(Problem) Boiler on the blink again? (Agitate) Don't get left in the cold this winter. (Solve) Our Gas Safe engineers fix all makes & models across Hackney and Islington. Fast, reliable service. Get a free quote online.
Finally, use Ad Extensions. These are extra bits of information that make your ad bigger and more useful, and they cost nothing extra.
- Sitelinks: Add links to your other service pages (e.g., "Boiler Servicing", "New Installations").
- Call Extension: Puts your phone number directly in the ad, making it clickable on mobile. Essential.
- Location Extension: Shows your business address and puts you on the map, proving you're a genuine local business.
Your London Google Ads Action Plan
It's a lot to take in, I know. But getting this right can genuinely transform a local business. Here's a summary of the main advice I have for you, broken down into an actionable plan. Focus on getting these fundamentals right, and you'll already be ahead of 90% of your competition.
| Area of Focus | Actionable Step | Why It's Critical for London |
|---|---|---|
| Budget | Start with a minimum of £1k-£2k/month. Calculate your max CPL based on customer value. | Ensures you have enough data to make decisions in a fast-moving, high-cost market. |
| Targeting | Use tight radius (e.g., 3-5 miles) or postcode targeting. Ditch "London" as a location. | Cuts out irrelevant searchers and massive competition, focusing spend on profitable local jobs. |
| Keywords | Focus on high-intent, long-tail keywords (e.g., "24 hour glazier battersea"). Build a strong negative keyword list. | Attracts users ready to buy now, not researchers, and stops you wasting money on irrelevant clicks. |
| Ad Copy | Include the location, a trust signal (e.g., "Gas Safe"), and a clear call to action. Use all relevant extensions. | Stands out in a crowded results page and signals to the user that you are the most relevant local choice. |
| Landing Page | Make your phone number huge and clickable. Add reviews/testimonials. Ensure it's fast and works perfectly on mobile. | This is where the conversion happens. A poor page will kill your ROI, no matter how good your ads are. |
When should I admit defeat and get some help?
Look, you're an expert at what you do. Whether you're a plumber, a solicitor, or a decorator, your time is valuable and is best spent doing your actual job and serving your customers. Google Ads is a full-time job in itself. The platform changes constantly, and what worked six months ago might not work today, especially in a market as dynamic as London.
If you've given it a go and you feel like you're just throwing money away, or if you're spending hours every week fiddling with campaigns instead of running your business, it might be time to call in an expert. The right agency or consultant won't just 'manage' your ads; they'll build a proper strategy that integrates with your business goals. They can often save you more money in wasted ad spend than their fee costs, all while generating better results.
Finding the right person can be a challenge, of course. You need someone with proven experience in your sector and, ideally, specific experience with the London market. Don't be afraid to ask for case studies and to really grill them on their strategy for your business. There are many great professionals out there, but it's worth doing your research to find one of London's best ad experts who truly understands your needs.
We believe the best way to show our value is to, well, show it. That's why we offer a completely free, no-obligation consultation where we'll go through your existing ad account (if you have one) or discuss a potential strategy from scratch. We'll give you honest, actionable advice you can take away and implement yourself. If you decide you'd like our help to do it, great. If not, you've still got a free expert audit under your belt. It's a much better way to start than just guessing.
Lukas Holschuh
Founder, Growth & Advertising Consultant
Great campaigns fail without expertise. Lukas and his team provide the missing strategy, optimizing your entire advertising funnel—from ad creatives and copy to landing page design.
Backed by a proven track record across SaaS, eLearning, and eCommerce, they don't just run ads; they engineer systems that convert. A data-driven partnership focused on tangible revenue growth.