What Is a Good ROAS in 2025? (Benchmarks, Context, and Sustainable Growth) Dani February 24, 2025

What Is a Good ROAS in 2025? (Benchmarks, Context, and Sustainable Growth)

ROAS 2025 graphic showing an upward arrow held above a businessman's hand

By Pixel Pluses Editorial Team

Return on Ad Spend (ROAS) has long been one of the most discussed and sometimes misunderstood performance metrics in digital marketing. For some businesses, ROAS is viewed as a straightforward metric: the higher it is, the better. Targets of 5×, 6×, or even 10× are often set without much consideration for what those numbers truly represent in terms of margins, scalability, or sustainability.

The reality in 2025 is far more nuanced. Rising advertising costs, increased competition, and the growing dominance of digital platforms have made it clear that a “good” ROAS does not always need to be exceptionally high. For small to mid-size e-commerce companies, travel service providers, and experience-based businesses, a healthy and sustainable ROAS often falls between 1.87× and 3.6×.

This range may appear conservative at first glance. Still, it reflects the economics of sustainable growth in competitive industries where building long-term customer relationships matters more than chasing vanity numbers.

Let’s unpack why this matters for advertising and marketing platforms, and what opportunities and challenges lie ahead.

Understanding ROAS

Calculator showing the word ROAS on screen with digital graphics illustrating advertising performance and return on ad spend.

At its core, ROAS is straightforward:

ROAS = Revenue Attributed to Advertising ÷ Advertising Spend

  • A 2× ROAS indicates that every $1 spent on advertising generates $2 in sales.

  • A 1× ROAS means a business is breaking even on ad spend, covering costs but not generating additional return.

  • Anything beyond that depends on industry norms, margin structures, and how well a brand leverages its customer base.

The key takeaway is that “good” ROAS is context-dependent. It must be measured against the broader financial model of the business, not in isolation.

Benchmarks by Industry in 2025

Man holding a digital tablet displaying ROAS benchmarking dashboard with glowing interface

Industry benchmarks provide useful context for evaluating performance. According to leading reports, average ROAS in 2025 varies significantly across verticals:

Colorful 2025 industry benchmark chart comparing expected ROAS multipliers across travel services, hospitality and tourism, retail e-commerce, attractions and experiences, and social media travel campaigns, displayed on a blue-to-green gradient background.

These numbers demonstrate that most businesses will not achieve 6× or 10× returns consistently. Instead, a 2× to 3× ROAS is not only normal but often a strong indicator of health and competitiveness.

The Aggregator Challenge

Illustration of rising revenue in the travel aggregator market, featuring the logos of GetYourGuide, Klook, and Viator on modern city buildings, with a large upward arrow and floating gold coins symbolizing growth and higher ROAS.

Independent businesses, particularly in tourism and local experiences, face a unique challenge: competing with large-scale aggregators such as GetYourGuide, Viator, and Klook.

These companies dominate digital visibility across search, social, and mobile. With significant capital at their disposal, they can afford to spend aggressively on advertising,  often at a short-term loss. Their strategy is based on market capture rather than immediate profitability.

For small operators, attempting to replicate this approach is neither feasible nor advisable. The path to success lies in focusing on areas where smaller businesses hold an advantage:

  • Owning and leveraging customer data rather than relying on rented traffic
  • Building retargeting audiences for efficient follow-ups
  • Reducing dependency on aggregator commissions
  • Establishing direct, repeatable sales channels that increase long-term profitability

When these foundations are in place, even a 2× ROAS can be highly valuable because it reflects sustainable, owned growth.

Why 1.87× – 3.6× Is a Strong ROAS

Numbers illustrate this best. Consider the following examples:.

A clean infographic comparing three business types and their advertising performance, showing ad spend, revenue, and ROAS on a blue-to-green gradient background, with rounded white panels and icons representing spending, sales, and marketing analytics.

Each of these outcomes represents not only profitability but also the creation of first-party data assets, stronger customer relationships, and repeatable performance patterns.

A ROAS in this range is not a sign of weakness; it is evidence of long-term viability.

The Long-Term ROI Equation

Blue digital interface showing rising bar chart and upward arrow representing ROAS growth

Short-term ROAS figures can be misleading if taken out of context. For businesses investing in direct digital campaigns, the first 6–12 months are often about building awareness, capturing audiences, and training ad algorithms.

During this phase, ROAS may start modestly. Over time, however, customer acquisition costs (CPA) typically decline while ROAS improves as campaigns optimize.

An example from a European regional experience company demonstrates this trajectory:

Three-stage ROAS performance chart showing monthly return projections from 1.9X in months 1 to 3, rising to 2.8X in months 4 to 6, and reaching 3.5X in months 7 to 12 on a blue gradient background.

By the end of year one, the company reduced acquisition costs by 30%, doubled repeat bookings, and gained full ownership of its customer base. This progression highlights why a “lower” ROAS in early stages can still indicate healthy long-term growth.

Practical Strategies for Smaller Businesses

Marketing strategy checklist on a clipboard showing icons for data collection, retargeting campaigns, multi-channel ads, and upselling, placed on a desk with a pen.

To compete effectively against larger players and to maximize ROAS, smaller businesses should adopt a holistic and data-driven approach:

  1. Be present across multiple channels. Diversification reduces risk and expands reach.

  2. Build first-party data early. Email sign-ups, loyalty programs, and CRM integrations are critical.

  3. Leverage retargeting and lookalike audiences. These strategies stretch ad budgets further by focusing on high-potential customers.

  4. Bundle and upsell. Increasing average order value boosts ROAS without requiring more ad spend.

  5. Prioritize sustainable growth. Aim for gradual improvements rather than chasing quick, unsustainable wins.

Key Takeaways

Neon green digital icons on a dark tech background showing an upward arrow, business growth bars, an AI head, and an increasing trend line.
  • A 1.87× to 3.6× ROAS is both healthy and realistic for small and mid-size businesses in 2025.

     

  • Benchmarks confirm that 2× to 3× is the typical range across travel, retail, and experiences.

     

  • Competing directly with aggregators is less effective than focusing on customer ownership and sustainable growth.

     

  • The ultimate goal is not the highest ROAS possible but the creation of a repeatable, data-driven growth engine.

Conclusion

Data visualization of a glowing blue highway-like digital path displaying performance multipliers of 1.87x, 3x, and 3.6x, representing analytics and ROAS improvement over time.

In today’s competitive landscape, the pursuit of “the highest ROAS” can be misleading. Instead, businesses should focus on sustainable performance that balances profitability with long-term customer ownership.

If your campaigns are consistently delivering a ROAS between 1.87× and 3.6×, you are not underachieving. You are building independence from aggregators, strengthening your margins, and creating a smarter foundation for scale.

That is what a good ROAS looks like in 2025.

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