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Google Ads for Real Estate: PPC Strategy for Agents, Teams, and Brokerages

Real estate Google Ads cost $3.50-$7.20 per click with a 2.47% average conversion rate. The gap between average and top performers is wider in real estate than almost any other vertical. Here’s how to close it.

Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 14 min

Overview

Why real estate professionals need Google Ads

Google Ads for real estate generates leads for agents, teams, and brokerages by placing your listings and services in front of people actively searching for properties or real estate professionals. The challenge: real estate has one of the lowest conversion rates in Google Ads at 2.47% (WordStream, 2025), and you’re competing with Zillow, Realtor.com, Redfin, and Homes.com for every click. These portals have billion-dollar ad budgets. You don’t. That means you need a sharper strategy, not a bigger one. The good news: portals compete on breadth. They rank for every city, every zip code, every property type. A local agent can compete on depth and specificity. “3-bedroom homes in Buckhead under $600K” is a search that portals serve with a generic listing page. You can serve it with a curated landing page, a personal introduction, and a phone number that connects to a real person who knows the neighborhood.

“Real estate agents who try to outspend Zillow on broad keywords lose. The agents who win on Google Ads pick 10-15 hyperlocal keyword themes and own them completely. You don’t need to be everywhere. You need to be the obvious choice in your target neighborhoods.”

Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital

What’s in this guide

  1. Why do Google Ads work for real estate?
  2. What campaign types should real estate professionals use?
  3. How should agents approach keyword strategy?
  4. How should real estate campaigns use geo-targeting?
  5. How do buyer campaigns differ from seller campaigns?
  6. What makes a high-converting real estate landing page?
  7. How much should real estate professionals spend on Google Ads?
  8. How do you compete with Zillow and Realtor.com?
  9. What are the key real estate PPC benchmarks?
  10. What are the biggest Google Ads mistakes in real estate?
  11. Google Ads launch checklist for real estate

Why do Google Ads work for real estate?

Google Ads works for real estate because property searches have high commercial intent and long buying cycles that reward early capture. The National Association of Realtors (NAR) reported in 2024 that 97% of homebuyers use the internet during their home search. The median time from search start to purchase is 10 weeks. An agent who captures a lead in week 1 has a 10-week nurture window to convert that lead into a commission.
Google Ads for real estate is a pay-per-click advertising strategy where real estate professionals bid on property-related and location-specific keywords to generate buyer leads, seller leads, or brand visibility at the top of Google search results.
The average real estate commission on a $400,000 home is $10,000-$12,000 (at 2.5-3%). If Google Ads produces one closed transaction per month at a cost of $1,500 in ad spend, that’s a 7:1 return. Real estate is one of the few verticals where a single conversion can pay for an entire quarter of ad spend. SEO in real estate is dominated by portals with domain authorities above 80. A solo agent’s website will never outrank Zillow for “homes for sale in [city]” organically. Google Ads lets you appear above Zillow in the paid results, with your name, your phone number, and your landing page. That’s visibility you can’t buy any other way.

What campaign types should real estate professionals use?

Real estate Google Ads strategies should use three campaign types, each serving a different purpose in the lead generation funnel. Running only search campaigns leaves significant opportunity on the table.
Campaign Type Best For Avg CPC Lead Quality
Search Campaigns High-intent buyers and sellers actively searching $3.50-$7.20 Highest (active intent)
Display Campaigns Retargeting site visitors, brand awareness in target areas $0.50-$2.00 Lower (passive, but cheap)
YouTube Campaigns Neighborhood tours, market updates, listing showcases $0.10-$0.30 per view Medium (builds trust pre-conversion)
Performance Max Multi-channel reach with AI optimization Varies Mixed (needs strong conversion data)
Search campaigns are your primary lead generator. They capture people typing “homes for sale in [neighborhood]” or “best real estate agent [city].” Start here and don’t expand until search is profitable. Display campaigns work best as retargeting. Someone visits your site, browses listings, and leaves. Display retargeting shows them your ads on news sites, blogs, and apps for the next 30-90 days. Cost per click on display is $0.50-$2.00, and retargeting audiences convert at 2-3x the rate of cold audiences. Don’t use display for cold prospecting since the 0.8-1.2% CTR (Promodo, 2026) means most impressions go unnoticed. YouTube campaigns are underused in real estate but highly effective. A 60-second neighborhood tour video ad targeting people searching “[city] real estate” on YouTube costs $0.10-$0.30 per view and builds name recognition before a prospect ever clicks a search ad. Agents using YouTube pre-roll report 15-25% higher search ad CTR from branded recognition (Jami Academy, 2026).

How should agents approach keyword strategy?

Real estate keyword strategy must separate buyer intent from seller intent, and hyperlocal terms from broad city-level terms. The biggest budget waste in real estate PPC is bidding on broad terms like “homes for sale” without geographic modifiers. You’ll pay for clicks from people in cities you don’t serve.
Intent Keyword Examples Avg CPC Competition
Buyer: Neighborhood “homes for sale in [neighborhood],” “[neighborhood] real estate,” “[subdivision] homes” $2-$5 Medium
Buyer: Property Type “condos for sale [city],” “townhomes [area],” “luxury homes [city]” $3-$7 High
Buyer: Agent Search “real estate agent [city],” “best realtor [area],” “buyer’s agent near me” $4-$8 High
Seller: Valuation “how much is my house worth,” “home value [city],” “sell my house [city]” $5-$10 Very high
Seller: Agent Search “listing agent [city],” “sell my home fast [city],” “best agent to sell house” $6-$12 Very high
The sweet spot for most agents is neighborhood-level buyer keywords. “Homes for sale in Buckhead” costs far less than “homes for sale in Atlanta” and targets a prospect who’s already narrowed their search to your target area. Build 5-10 ad groups around your core neighborhoods, each with 10-15 keyword variations. A team covering 3-4 neighborhoods with tight keyword groups will outperform a brokerage bidding on city-wide terms at 3x the budget. Seller keywords cost more because the lead value is higher: a listing generates both a commission and future buyer leads from the listing itself. But seller intent is harder to capture since most “how much is my house worth” searchers click on Zillow’s Zestimate or Redfin’s estimate tool. To compete, you need a compelling offer like a free CMA (Comparative Market Analysis) or a home value landing page with instant estimates.

How should real estate campaigns use geo-targeting?

Geo-targeting is the most important setting in any real estate Google Ads account. Real estate is inherently local, and every click from outside your service area is wasted money. Set your location targeting correctly from day one. Key geo-targeting settings:
  1. Target by radius or zip codes, not cities. A 15-mile radius around your target neighborhoods, or a list of specific zip codes, gives more precise control than city-level targeting. Use Google’s location report to identify which zip codes generate leads and which waste budget.
  2. Set targeting to “Presence” not “Presence or interest.” This is critical. By default, Google targets people “in or interested in” your location. That means someone in New York researching “Miami condos” sees your ad. They might be planning to move, but 80%+ of these clicks are tire-kickers. Set targeting to “Presence: People in or regularly in your targeted locations” to reach people physically in your market.
  3. Use location bid adjustments. If your highest-value neighborhoods convert at 2x the rate of outer suburbs, increase bids by 25-50% in those zip codes. Reduce bids by 25-40% in areas with low conversion rates.
  4. Exclude locations explicitly. If you only serve the west side of a metro area, exclude the east side zip codes. Don’t rely on radius targeting alone.
One agent we audited was spending $2,800/month on Google Ads. Their location report showed 35% of clicks came from outside their service area because they used “Presence or interest” targeting. Switching to “Presence” and adding zip code exclusions cut wasted spend by $980/month overnight.

How do buyer campaigns differ from seller campaigns?

Buyer and seller campaigns require completely separate structures because the intent, messaging, landing pages, and conversion actions are fundamentally different. Never mix buyer and seller keywords in the same campaign. Buyer campaigns:
  • Keywords: property searches, neighborhood + homes for sale, property type + location
  • Landing page: IDX search page with property listings, or curated listing page for a specific area
  • Conversion action: lead form (name, email, phone, preferred price range) or saved search signup
  • CPC range: $2-$7 per click
  • Sales cycle: 10-16 weeks from first click to closing
  • Budget allocation: 60-70% of total PPC budget
Seller campaigns:
  • Keywords: home value, sell my house, listing agent, CMA
  • Landing page: home valuation tool or free CMA request form
  • Conversion action: home valuation request (address + contact info)
  • CPC range: $5-$12 per click
  • Sales cycle: 2-6 months from first contact to listing agreement
  • Budget allocation: 30-40% of total PPC budget
Buyer leads cost less but have a longer conversion timeline and lower close rate. A typical Google Ads buyer lead closes at 1-3% over 90 days. Seller leads cost more per lead but convert at 5-15% once you get the listing appointment, and each listing generates multiple buyer inquiries. The blended ROI of running both campaigns together is higher than running either alone.

What makes a high-converting real estate landing page?

Real estate landing pages convert at 3-5% on average, but top performers reach 8-12% (Promodo, 2026). If you’re below 3%, the landing page is the problem, not the ads. The most common mistake: sending ad traffic to a generic homepage or a broad IDX search page with no pre-filtering. For buyer campaigns, the best-performing landing page format is a pre-filtered listing page for the specific neighborhood or property type the user searched for. If someone clicks on “townhomes in Midtown Atlanta,” they should land on a page showing only townhomes in Midtown Atlanta, not your entire MLS feed. Include:
  • Pre-filtered property listings matching the search intent
  • Lead capture form: “Get new listings before they hit Zillow” (name, email, phone)
  • Your photo, name, and phone number above the fold
  • Neighborhood insights (average prices, school ratings, walkability scores)
  • 3-5 testimonials from buyers you’ve helped in that area
For seller campaigns, the best format is a home value landing page. Offer an instant estimate or a free CMA. Collect the property address and contact information. Don’t ask for too much information upfront since address + name + email is enough for the first touch. Follow up with a phone call within 5 minutes. Real estate leads called within 5 minutes are 21x more likely to convert than leads called after 30 minutes (InsideSales.com research). Page speed matters enormously. Real estate landing pages with IDX widgets are often slow (5-8 seconds). Strip out unnecessary scripts, compress images, and target under 3 seconds on mobile. Every additional second costs you roughly 7% of conversions.

How much should real estate professionals spend on Google Ads?

Budget recommendations for real estate Google Ads depend on your market size, competition, and business goals. The minimum viable budget for Google Ads to collect enough data for optimization is $900/month. Below that, you won’t generate enough clicks for Google’s algorithms to learn (Jami Academy, 2026).
Agent Type Monthly Budget Expected Leads CPL Range
Solo agent (suburban market) $900-$2,000 15-30 $50-$80
Solo agent (competitive metro) $2,000-$4,000 20-40 $80-$150
Team (3-5 agents) $3,000-$8,000 40-100 $60-$120
Brokerage $5,000-$15,000 60-200 $70-$150
The real question isn’t how much to spend. It’s what’s your acceptable cost per closing. Work backward: if your average commission is $10,000, your lead-to-close rate from Google Ads is 2%, and you need leads to cost less than $200 each, your max cost per lead is $200 and you need 50 leads per closing. At $100/lead, that’s $5,000 in ad spend per $10,000 commission, a 2:1 return before accounting for repeat business and referrals. Split your budget 60/40 between buyer and seller campaigns if you work both sides. If you specialize in listings, flip that to 70% seller, 30% buyer. Always keep 10-15% of budget reserved for retargeting display campaigns, which convert warm leads at 2-3x the rate of cold search traffic.

How do you compete with Zillow and Realtor.com?

You don’t outspend portals. Zillow’s advertising revenue exceeded $1.9 billion in 2024 (Zillow Group annual report). You compete on specificity, speed, and personal service. Here’s how:
  1. Go hyperlocal. Portals bid on “homes for sale in [city].” You bid on “homes for sale in [neighborhood],” “[subdivision name] real estate,” and “[school district] homes.” These long-tail keywords have lower CPCs ($2-$4 vs $5-$8 for city-level) and attract buyers further along in their search process.
  2. Lead with your name and face. Your ads feature a real person. Portal ads feature a brand. Use image extensions with your headshot, include your name in headlines (“John Smith | [City] Real Estate”), and emphasize local expertise: “Living and selling in [neighborhood] since 2012.”
  3. Respond faster. Portals distribute leads to agents who may call back in hours or days. You call back in 5 minutes. Speed-to-lead is the single biggest competitive advantage an individual agent has over a portal’s lead distribution model.
  4. Offer what portals can’t. “See this home before it hits Zillow.” Coming-soon listings, pocket listings, and early access create urgency that portals can’t match. Use ad copy like “New listings 48 hours before they appear on Zillow” if your MLS allows pre-marketing.
  5. Retarget portal visitors. You can’t target people on Zillow directly, but you can target custom intent audiences in Google Ads using keywords like “Zillow [your city]” and “Realtor.com [your city].” These audiences are actively searching but may prefer working with a local agent.

What are the key real estate PPC benchmarks?

Real estate PPC benchmarks vary significantly by market, property type, and whether you’re running buyer or seller campaigns. These numbers represent 2025-2026 industry averages across U.S. markets.
Metric Industry Average Top Performers Source
CPC (Search) $3.50-$7.20 $2.00-$4.00 WordStream/Uproas, 2025-2026
CTR (Search) 4-7% 8-12% Promodo, 2026
Conversion Rate (Search) 2.47% 5-8% WordStream, 2025
Cost Per Lead $50-$150 $30-$70 Multiple sources, 2025-2026
CTR (Display) 0.8-1.2% 1.5-2.5% Promodo, 2026
Lead-to-Close Rate 1-3% 3-5% NAR/Industry data, 2024
The critical metric for real estate isn’t cost per lead. It’s cost per closing. A $150 lead that closes at 3% costs $5,000 per transaction. A $50 lead that closes at 1% costs $5,000 per transaction. Same outcome, but the $50 leads require a much larger CRM and follow-up operation. Focus on lead quality (measured by close rate) as much as lead quantity. Year-over-year, real estate CPC increased 7% in 2025 (Uproas, 2026). Costs will keep rising as more agents enter the paid search space. The agents who’ll continue profiting from Google Ads are those who build systems around speed-to-lead, consistent follow-up, and conversion rate optimization on their landing pages.

What are the biggest Google Ads mistakes in real estate?

Real estate agents make specific Google Ads mistakes that other industries don’t, largely because of the unique dynamics of property search and the dominance of portal competitors.
  1. Bidding on city-level terms against portals. “Homes for sale in Miami” pits you against Zillow, Redfin, Realtor.com, and every brokerage in South Florida. Your $3,000/month budget disappears by the 15th. Go neighborhood-level where portals bid less aggressively.
  2. Using “Presence or interest” location targeting. This default setting shows your ads to people researching your market from other cities. Most of these clicks don’t convert. Switch to “Presence” targeting only.
  3. No lead follow-up system. Google Ads generates the lead. Your CRM and follow-up process convert it. Agents who call within 5 minutes close at 5x the rate of agents who call the next day. Without a CRM and automated follow-up sequences, Google Ads leads go cold and the investment is wasted.
  4. Sending traffic to a generic IDX page. An IDX page with 5,000 listings doesn’t convert because it creates decision paralysis. Send traffic to a pre-filtered page matching the search query: specific neighborhood, property type, and price range.
  5. Not separating buyer and seller campaigns. Mixing these means “sell my house” competes with “homes for sale” for the same budget, and the messaging can’t be tailored to either audience.
  6. Ignoring mobile. 72% of real estate searches start on a phone (NAR, 2024). If your landing page loads in 6 seconds on mobile or the form requires scrolling through 10 fields, you’re losing the majority of your traffic.
  7. Measuring leads, not closings. If you track form submissions but not which leads become clients, you can’t tell which campaigns produce revenue. Connect your Google Ads data to your CRM and track cost per closing, not just cost per lead.

Google Ads launch checklist for real estate

Work through this checklist before or immediately after launching real estate Google Ads campaigns. Items are ordered by impact.
  1. Set location targeting to “Presence” only and target specific zip codes or a radius around your farm areas
  2. Create separate campaigns for buyer and seller keywords
  3. Build neighborhood-level ad groups (not city-level) with 10-15 keyword variations each
  4. Create dedicated landing pages: pre-filtered listings for buyers, home value tool for sellers
  5. Set up conversion tracking for form submissions AND phone calls
  6. Add negative keywords: rental, Zillow login, real estate school, careers, license, MLS access
  7. Enable location extensions, call extensions, and image extensions (with your headshot)
  8. Set up a CRM with automated follow-up sequences (call within 5 minutes, email drip for 90 days)
  9. Launch a retargeting display campaign for website visitors (30-90 day window)
  10. Configure ad scheduling: run buyer ads 7 days/week, seller ads during business hours
  11. Review search terms weekly; add 5-10 negative keywords per review cycle
  12. Track cost per closing monthly, not just cost per lead
Related

Related Resources

Google Ads Audit Checklist

47-point checklist to audit any Google Ads account for wasted spend and missed opportunities. Get Checklist →

Google Ads Negative Keyword List

Pre-built negative keyword lists by industry, including real estate, to reduce wasted spend. Get List →

Landing Page Checklist

Complete checklist for building landing pages that convert paid traffic into leads. Get Checklist →

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How much do Google Ads cost for real estate agents?

The average cost per click for real estate Google Ads ranges from $3.50-$7.20, with seller keywords costing more ($5-$12) than buyer keywords ($2-$7). Solo agents typically spend $900-$2,000/month in suburban markets and $2,000-$4,000/month in competitive metros. Cost per lead averages $50-$150 depending on market and campaign type.

Are Google Ads worth it for real estate agents?

Yes, if you have a lead follow-up system in place. A single closed transaction from Google Ads ($10,000+ commission) can pay for 3-6 months of ad spend. The agents who fail with Google Ads are usually those without a CRM, without speed-to-lead processes, or those bidding on overly broad city-level keywords against portals with massive budgets.

How can real estate agents compete with Zillow on Google Ads?

Compete on specificity, not budget. Target neighborhood-level and subdivision-level keywords where portals bid less aggressively. Lead with your personal brand (name, photo, local expertise). Respond to leads within 5 minutes. Offer access to listings before they appear on portals. These advantages are impossible for automated portal lead distribution systems to replicate.

What is a good conversion rate for real estate Google Ads?

The industry average conversion rate for real estate search campaigns is 2.47% (WordStream, 2025). Top performers achieve 5-8% with dedicated landing pages, fast mobile load times, and strong lead magnets. If you’re below 2%, focus on landing page optimization: pre-filter listings to match the search query, add your phone number above the fold, and reduce form fields to 3-4.

Should real estate agents use Google Ads or Facebook Ads?

Google Ads captures active intent (people searching for homes right now) and produces higher-quality leads with faster close timelines. Facebook Ads generates demand and works well for seller leads (home value ads), just-listed/just-sold social proof, and retargeting. Most successful agents run both: Google for buyer leads, Facebook for seller leads and brand visibility.

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