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Ad Spend Budget Spreadsheet: Track Planned vs. Actual Spend and ROAS by Campaign

A free ad spend budget template with tabs for annual channel budgets, monthly planned vs. actual tracking, campaign-level spend monitoring, ROAS calculation, and quarterly reallocation. Built for teams managing $5K to $500K+ in monthly ad spend.

Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 9 min

What’s in this template

  1. What is an ad spend budget spreadsheet?
  2. Who should use it?
  3. Template preview: all 5 tabs
  4. What each tab contains
  5. Ad spend benchmarks by channel
  6. How to set up your ad budget tracker
  7. Budget mistakes that burn money
  8. Download
  9. FAQ
About This Template

What is an ad spend budget spreadsheet?

An ad spend budget spreadsheet is a structured tracker that records how much you’ve allocated to each advertising channel, how much you’re actually spending per campaign, and what return each campaign generates. It answers three questions every week: Are we on pace? What’s working? Where should we shift money?

Ad spend budget spreadsheet: A multi-tab document that maps advertising budgets by channel and time period, tracks actual spend against plan at the campaign level, calculates ROAS per campaign, and logs quarterly reallocation decisions with supporting rationale.

Supermetrics and Windsor.ai both offer Google Sheets budget pacing templates that pull data directly from ad platforms, but those require paid subscriptions and API integrations. This spreadsheet gives you the same structure as a standalone document your whole team can use from day one. No integrations required. The urgency is real. WordStream’s 2026 Google Ads benchmarks show the average CPC across all industries is $5.26, up from $4.22 two years prior. CPC has risen for 87% of industries year over year. If you’re not tracking spend at the campaign level and shifting budget away from underperformers weekly, rising costs will eat your margin quietly.
Who It’s For

Who should use this ad spend budget spreadsheet?

Any team running paid advertising across one or more platforms.

PPC Managers

Track budget pacing across Google Ads, Meta Ads, LinkedIn Ads, and TikTok Ads in one sheet. The campaign-level tab catches overspend before it hits your monthly ceiling.

Marketing Directors

See total ad spend by channel and month without logging into 4 different platforms. The annual overview tab gives you the CFO-ready summary. The ROAS tab proves which channels deserve more budget.

Agency Media Buyers

Manage multiple client budgets with separate copies of this template. The quarterly reallocation tab documents every budget shift with a rationale, giving clients full transparency on where their money goes.

Preview

What does this ad spend budget spreadsheet contain?

Five tabs covering budgeting, tracking, performance, and reallocation.

Tab Purpose Key Columns
1. Annual Budget by Channel Top-level allocation plan Channel, Annual Budget, % of Total, Q1-Q4 Split, Monthly Average, Notes
2. Monthly Planned vs. Actual Budget pacing by month Channel, Month, Planned Spend, Actual Spend, Variance ($), Variance (%), Pace Status
3. Campaign-Level Tracker Granular spend by campaign Channel, Campaign Name, Monthly Budget, MTD Spend, Daily Run Rate, Projected Month-End, Over/Under Flag
4. ROAS by Campaign Return on ad spend calculation Campaign, Spend, Revenue, ROAS, CPA, Conversions, Conv. Rate, Profit/Loss
5. Quarterly Reallocation Budget shift decisions and rationale Channel, Previous Quarter Budget, Previous Quarter ROAS, New Budget, Change ($), Change (%), Rationale
Benchmarks

What are the current CPC and ROAS benchmarks by channel?

Use these as starting points when setting your initial budget allocations. Data sourced from WordStream, Triple Whale, and uproAS (2025-2026).

Channel Average CPC (2025-2026) Typical ROAS Range Best For
Google Search Ads $1.50 – $6.75 2:1 – 8:1 High-intent buyers, lead gen
Google Shopping $0.50 – $1.50 3:1 – 10:1 E-commerce product sales
Meta Ads (Facebook + Instagram) $0.50 – $2.00 2:1 – 6:1 Awareness, retargeting, DTC
LinkedIn Ads $5.00 – $12.00 1:1 – 3:1 B2B lead generation
TikTok Ads $0.30 – $1.50 1.5:1 – 5:1 Younger demographics, DTC
YouTube Ads $0.10 – $0.50 (CPV) 1:1 – 4:1 Brand awareness, mid-funnel
Legal services see the highest Google Ads CPCs at $6.75+ on average (WordStream, 2025). E-commerce and travel tend to be on the lower end at $1.16 and $1.53 respectively. The template’s ROAS tab will tell you whether your actual performance falls within or outside these ranges.
What’s Included

What does each tab of the ad spend tracker cover?

  • Annual Budget by Channel: Start here. Enter your total annual ad budget and allocate across channels. The template includes a suggested split based on your business model (B2B, DTC, or Local). For a B2B company spending $120,000/year on ads, a common starting split is 50% Google Search, 20% LinkedIn, 15% Meta retargeting, and 15% experimental. The percentages auto-calculate from dollar amounts.
  • Monthly Planned vs. Actual: Each row is one channel for one month. Enter planned spend at the start of the month and update actual spend weekly. The “Pace Status” column shows “On Track” (within 10% of plan), “Overpacing” (more than 10% over), or “Underpacing” (more than 10% under). Conditional formatting uses green, red, and yellow for instant visual scanning.
  • Campaign-Level Tracker: This is where daily management happens. Each row is an individual campaign. The “Daily Run Rate” formula divides MTD spend by the number of days elapsed. “Projected Month-End” multiplies the run rate by days remaining. If a campaign is projected to exceed its monthly budget by more than 15%, the row turns red. Update this tab every 2-3 days.
  • ROAS by Campaign: Enter campaign-level spend and attributed revenue (from Google Ads conversion tracking, Meta’s CAPI, or your CRM). The sheet calculates ROAS, CPA, conversion rate, and a simple profit/loss estimate. This tab answers the only question that matters: for every dollar we spent, how much did we get back?
  • Quarterly Reallocation: Every 90 days, review ROAS by channel. This tab pulls last quarter’s budget and ROAS data and provides space to enter the new quarter’s allocation with a required “Rationale” column. Documenting why you shifted $5,000 from LinkedIn to Google Search protects you from second-guessing and gives stakeholders full visibility.
How To Use

How do you set up this ad spend budget tracker?

Initial setup: 30 minutes. Weekly updates: 20 minutes.

  1. Set your annual ad budget and channel split in Tab 1. If you don’t have historical data, use the benchmarks above as a starting point and plan to reallocate after the first quarter. Enter total budget, let the formulas break it into quarterly and monthly amounts.
  2. Enter planned monthly spend for each channel in Tab 2. Not every month is equal. If you’re an e-commerce brand, November and December might get 2x the normal allocation. If you’re B2B SaaS, Q1 and Q4 may be heavier. Adjust monthly targets to match your seasonality.
  3. Add active campaigns to Tab 3. List every running campaign with its platform, campaign name, and monthly budget cap. Update MTD spend every Monday and Thursday by pulling numbers from each ad platform. The formulas handle run rate and projections automatically.
  4. Calculate ROAS monthly in Tab 4. At month-end, export conversion and revenue data from each platform. For campaigns using offline conversions or long sales cycles, use your CRM’s attribution data instead. Enter spend and revenue per campaign, and the sheet calculates everything else.
  5. Reallocate quarterly in Tab 5. At the end of each quarter, sort Tab 4 by ROAS. Shift 10-20% of budget from campaigns with ROAS below 2:1 to campaigns above 4:1. Document the shift in the rationale column. Small, data-backed moves compound into significant performance gains over 12 months.
Expert Context

What ad budgeting mistakes burn money fastest?

We’ve audited ad accounts spending $10,000 to $400,000 per month at ScaleGrowth.Digital. The same patterns show up at every spend level:
  1. Setting monthly budgets and never checking pacing. A $30,000/month Google Ads budget that runs at $1,200/day will exhaust by the 25th. The last 5 days of the month get zero impressions. The campaign-level tracker catches this on day 3, not day 25.
  2. Averaging ROAS across all campaigns instead of measuring each one. An account with 4:1 blended ROAS might have two campaigns at 8:1 and three at 1.5:1. The bad campaigns are hiding behind the good ones. Tab 4 surfaces this by requiring campaign-level ROAS entry.
  3. Never reallocating. Smartsheet’s 2025 advertising budget research found that teams who reallocate quarterly outperform those who set annual budgets by 20-35% in cost efficiency. The quarterly reallocation tab makes this a standard practice, not an exception.

“The number one reason ad budgets get cut isn’t poor performance. It’s the inability to prove good performance. If you can show your CFO exactly which campaigns generated which revenue at what cost, your budget grows. If you can’t, you’re first in line for cuts.”

Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital

Download the Ad Spend Budget Spreadsheet

Get all 5 tabs with pacing formulas, ROAS calculators, conditional formatting, and reallocation tracking. Ready to use in 30 minutes. Download Free Spreadsheet

Google Sheets format. No spam. Instant access.

Related

Related Resources

ROAS Calculator

Calculate return on ad spend for individual campaigns or your entire account with our free interactive tool. Try Calculator

Marketing Budget Template

The broader marketing budget template covering all channels (paid + organic + tools). Pairs with this ad-specific tracker. Get Template

Google Ads Audit Checklist

Before setting your budget, audit your account structure. This checklist covers campaign setup, bidding, targeting, and wasted spend. Get Checklist

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I check ad budget pacing?

Check campaign-level pacing every 2-3 days. Update the monthly planned vs. actual tab weekly. Run ROAS calculations at the end of each month. Reallocate budgets quarterly. For high-spend accounts ($50K+/month), daily pacing checks are worth the 5 minutes they take.

What’s a good ROAS benchmark for paid advertising?

A 4:1 ROAS ($4 revenue for every $1 spent) is a common benchmark for profitability across most industries. E-commerce brands on Google Shopping often target 5:1 to 10:1. B2B companies on LinkedIn may accept 1.5:1 to 3:1 because of higher customer lifetime values. Below 2:1, most campaigns lose money after factoring in COGS and overhead.

Should I track ad spend in a spreadsheet or use a tool like Supermetrics?

Start with this spreadsheet to build the habit and understand the metrics. Once you’re spending over $50,000/month across 3+ platforms, automation tools like Supermetrics ($69/month) or Windsor.ai save significant time by pulling data directly from ad accounts. The spreadsheet structure maps to these tools, so migration is straightforward.

How do I calculate ROAS when conversions happen offline?

Use your CRM’s attribution data instead of ad platform conversion data. Import closed-won deals with their original ad campaign source into Tab 4. For B2B with 60-90 day sales cycles, calculate ROAS on a lagged basis (Q1 spend vs. Q2 conversions from Q1 campaigns). The template supports both real-time and lagged ROAS calculations.

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