Average CPA for Facebook Ads: 2026 Benchmarks by Industry

14 July 2026

Written By Katja Orel

Lead Editor, UGC Marketing

Fact Checked By Sebastian Novin

Co-Founder & COO, Influee

The average CPA for Facebook ads is between $18 and $20 across all industries. But the average hides a 7x gap. Education pays $7.85 for a conversion while technology pays $55.21 for the same result on the same platform.

Your industry sets your baseline more than anything else you control. A $30 CPA is a win for a SaaS brand and a warning sign for a supplement brand.

This post covers three things: the formula that actually explains your CPA, the 2026 benchmarks for your vertical, and the three levers that move the number. If you're looking at a CPA in Ads Manager and wondering whether it's any good, start here.

TL;DR

  • The average CPA for Facebook ads is $18–$20, from $7.85 (education) to $55.21 (technology).
  • CPA is driven by three inputs: CPA = CPM ÷ (CTR × CVR) × 1,000. Three levers, not one.
  • High conversion rates mean low CPAs; fitness, education, and healthcare lead on both.
  • Creative is the highest-leverage fix for DTC brands: it moves both CTR and CVR at once.
  • Diagnose which input is broken before touching bids; it's usually the creative or the landing page.
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What is CPA in Facebook ads, and how is it calculated?

CPA, or cost per action, is what you pay for each conversion your ads produce.

A conversion is whatever action you defined in your campaign objective: a purchase, a lead form submission, an app install, an add to cart. Set that objective before you draw any conclusions, because a lead-gen CPA and a purchase CPA aren't the same measurement.

CPA = total ad spend ÷ total conversions. If you spend $2,000 and get 100 purchases, your CPA is $20.

That formula gives you the number. It doesn't tell you why the number is what it is. For that, break CPA into the three inputs underneath it:

CPA = CPM ÷ (CTR × CVR) × 1,000

  • CPM is what you pay per 1,000 impressions, driven by audience competition.
  • CTR is the percentage of people who click, driven by creative quality.
  • CVR is the percentage of clickers who convert, driven by your landing page and offer.

A high CPA means at least one of these three is broken. Most brands only try to fix the bid, when the real problem is usually the creative or the landing page. The fix depends on which input is off, and the rest of this post is about spotting which one.

The CPA formula broken into its three inputs: CPM, CTR and conversion rate, shown as a simple equation

Average CPA for Facebook ads by industry (2026)

Industry is the single biggest driver of your CPA baseline. The all-industry average runs $18 to $20, but the table below shows why that average is close to useless on its own. The spread runs from $7.85 to $55.21.

Avg CVR

Avg CPA

Education

13.6%

$7.85

Apparel (eCommerce)

4.1%

$10.98

Healthcare

11.0%

$12.31

Fitness

14.3%

$13.29

Real Estate

10.7%

$16.92

Retail & Shopping

3.3%

$21.47

Travel & Hospitality

2.8%

$22.50

Employment & Job Training

11.7%

$23.24

B2B

10.6%

$23.77

Beauty & Personal Care

7.1%

$25.49

Legal Services

5.6%

$28.70

Consumer Services

9.9%

$31.11

Finance & Insurance

9.1%

$41.43

Automotive

5.1%

$43.84

Home Improvement

6.6%

$44.66

Technology

2.3%

$55.21

Source: AdBacklog, 2025 global data.

A few patterns matter for DTC brands.

High CVR means low CPA. Fitness converts at 14.3% and pays $13.29. Education converts at 13.6% and pays $7.85. Healthcare converts at 11.0% and pays $12.31.

The industries with the highest conversion rates are at the bottom of the CPA table. The wider Facebook Ads benchmarks map the same industries across CTR, CPC, CPM, and ROAS, so you can see where each one sits on every metric. Your CPA is a conversion-rate problem as much as a spend problem.

It also tracks with revenue efficiency, so a strong good ROAS Facebook ads result usually shows up next to a low CPA. Both reward the same thing: more conversions per dollar.

Apparel at $10.98 needs context. eCommerce apparel converts at only 4.1%, yet posts one of the lowest CPAs in the table. Low prices and impulse buying explain it.

A $30 order closes faster than a $200 considered purchase. If you're a fashion brand and your CPA is $30, that isn't automatically a problem.

Check it against your average order value and margin, not the industry line.

Technology at $55.21 is structural, not failure. Long consideration cycles, higher price points, and complex products push CVR down to 2.3% and CPA up.

SaaS and tech brands should set CPA targets off customer lifetime value, not the industry average.

The benchmarks that matter most for Influee brands: apparel ($10.98), beauty and personal care ($25.49), retail ($21.47), and travel ($22.50).

If you're running one of these verticals and you're above your line, the next two sections tell you where to look.

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What your CPA is actually telling you, and which lever to pull

Before you change anything, diagnose which of the three inputs is dragging your CPA up. Same formula, used as a checklist.

Take a beauty brand running a $40 CPA against the $25.49 benchmark and walk it through three steps.

Step 1: Check CTR against the benchmark

Beauty averages around a 1.51% CTR on Facebook. If yours is below that, the creative is the problem, because people are seeing the ad and scrolling past it.

Fix it with new hooks, UGC-style video, and a different opening frame. Your good CTR Facebook ads benchmark is the first place to check, since a number below it points at the creative, not the bid.

Step 2: Check CVR against the benchmark

Beauty converts at roughly 7.1%. If your CTR is fine but your CVR is at 3%, the ad is working and the landing page isn't.

The click is happening; the sale isn't. Fix the post-click experience: page load speed, offer clarity, and social proof on the product page.

Step 3: Check CPM

If CTR and CVR are both at benchmark and CPA is still high, you're overpaying per impression.

Test Advantage+ audiences against manual targeting, cut audience overlap, or open up to colder but cheaper audiences.

Work the steps in that order. Creative first, landing page second, bidding last, because that's the order of leverage for almost every DTC brand.

A DTC beauty brand diagnosing a $40 CPA against the $25.49 benchmark using a three-step CTR, CVR and CPM check

Why creative quality is the highest-leverage CPA fix for DTC brands

Creative is the only lever that moves two of the three CPA inputs at once. That's what makes it the highest-return fix for DTC brands, and it's the connection almost every CPA article skips.

CTR. Creator-led UGC ads consistently beat polished brand video on Facebook CTR, because they look like a normal post instead of an ad. People stop and watch.

Higher CTR means more clicks at the same CPM, which means a lower CPA at the same conversion rate.

CVR. When the creative shows the product in real use by a real person, it sets accurate expectations, so the landing page converts better. There's no credibility gap between the ad and the page.

Polished brand video tends to overpromise. UGC-style content shows the product as it is, which cuts post-click drop-off.

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The two effects compound. Lift CTR by 50% (from 1% to 1.5%) and CVR by 30% (from 5% to 6.5%), and your CPA nearly halves at the same CPM. That isn't a bidding optimization. It's a creative one.

Two pieces decide whether creative pulls its weight. Strong hooks open on the problem or the result, not your logo, and the copy underneath is what turns a click into a sale.

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What to do when your CPA is above benchmark

If your CPA is above your industry benchmark, run these three checks in order of impact. It's a starting point, not a full optimization guide.

1. Test new creative before touching bids

If your CTR is below benchmark, start here. Brief three to five new hook angles, run UGC-style video against your current creative, and change the first frame. A different format like podcast style ads also gives the auction something fresh to test.

Give each new creative three to five days and $50 to $100 before you judge it.

2. Audit the post-click experience

If CTR is at benchmark but CVR is low, the ad isn't the problem. Check landing page load speed (past three seconds you lose conversions), offer clarity, and social proof above the fold.

If your ads pull clicks but no sales, a no conversions Facebook ads pattern usually points at the page, not the campaign.

3. Check audience, frequency, and placement

If CTR and CVR are both fine and CPA is still high, look at frequency. When the same person sees your ad more than three or four times, they stop responding to it. That's ad fatigue Facebook, and it pushes your CPA back up.

Expand the audience or refresh the creative set. Then check your placement breakdown.

Avg CTR

CPA implication

Facebook Feed

~1.1%

Balanced, primary workhorse placement

Facebook Stories

~0.8%

Lower CTR, cheaper impressions; CPA rides on CVR

Facebook Reels

~0.6–1.0%

High reach, lower CTR; strong for awareness, weaker for direct CPA

Audience Network

~0.6%

Lowest CTR, highest CPA risk; check lead quality

CTR varies a lot by placement, and lower-CTR placements carry higher CPA risk at the same conversion rate. Facebook Feed does the heavy lifting at around 1.1% CTR.

Audience Network runs near 0.6%, so if it's eating a meaningful share of your budget, it may be dragging your blended CPA up with low-quality clicks. That rising share of cheap, low-intent traffic is also what a low quality ranking Facebook ads score is warning you about.

None of these three checks is a bid change. That's the point.

For most DTC brands above benchmark, the CPA fix lives in the creative and the page, and the bid is the last thing to touch.

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FAQ

What is the average CPA for Facebook ads?

The average CPA for Facebook ads falls in the $18 to $20 range across all industries. What you should actually expect depends on your vertical, which can move your baseline from under $10 to over $50, so weigh your number against your industry rather than the overall average.

What is a good CPA for Facebook ads?

A good CPA for Facebook ads is any figure below your industry benchmark and inside your margin. For most DTC brands that lands between $15 and $30, but a $50 CPA can be healthy for high-LTV products and a $15 CPA can lose money on thin margins.

What is CPA in Facebook advertising?

CPA in Facebook advertising is the cost per action, meaning what you pay for each conversion your ads drive. The action is whatever you set as your objective, such as a purchase, a lead, or an add to cart.

How do I calculate CPA for Facebook ads?

You calculate CPA for Facebook ads by dividing total ad spend by total conversions. If you spend $2,000 and get 100 purchases, your CPA is $20 per purchase.

Why is my Facebook ads CPA so high?

Your Facebook ads CPA is high because at least one of three inputs is off: a low CTR from weak creative, a low conversion rate from the landing page or offer, or an expensive CPM from audience competition. Weak creative is the most common cause for DTC brands.

Is CPA or ROAS more important for Facebook ads?

CPA and ROAS measure different things, so track both. CPA tells you what a customer costs to acquire, while ROAS tells you the revenue each ad dollar returns. CPA is the cleaner target for lead generation, and ROAS fits revenue-driven ecommerce better.

Table of Contents

TL;DR

What is CPA in Facebook ads, and how is it calculated?

Average CPA for Facebook ads by industry (2026)

What your CPA is actually telling you, and which lever to pull

Why creative quality is the highest-leverage CPA fix for DTC brands

What to do when your CPA is above benchmark

FAQ

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