Water damage restoration keywords hit $250 per click in 2026. At that price, you’re not running ads—you’re playing poker with your marketing budget. And most restoration companies are losing.
I come from a world where $50 CPCs were considered extreme. Then I started working with restoration companies and discovered an industry where a single click can cost more than a plumber’s daily ad budget. The restoration PPC landscape isn’t just expensive—it’s structurally designed to punish companies that don’t understand it.
Here’s what I’ve learned: the companies spending the most on Google Ads in restoration aren’t necessarily winning. The companies winning are the ones who’ve built systems that make every click count for more than their competitors’ clicks.
The Real Cost of Restoration PPC in 2026
Let’s put actual numbers on the table. “Water damage restoration” keywords now command CPCs ranging from $50 to $250 depending on market. Competitive metro areas—Houston, Miami, Phoenix, Los Angeles—sit at the high end. Mid-market cities like Sacramento, Nashville, and Tampa run $80-$150.
At these prices, a typical water damage job takes 3-5 clicks to convert. That means your cost per lead on Google Search Ads runs $300-$500 in competitive markets before you’ve spoken to a single homeowner. Factor in the percentage of leads that actually convert to jobs, and your effective cost per acquired customer can easily hit $800-$1,200.
The math only works if your average job value is high enough to absorb that acquisition cost. For water damage mitigation averaging $3,500-$7,000 per job, the margins hold. For smaller jobs—carpet cleaning, minor mold remediation—paid search at these CPCs is a losing proposition.
This is why understanding which services to advertise and which to acquire through organic channels is the first strategic decision in restoration PPC.
Google Local Services Ads: The Channel Most Restoration Companies Underuse
Google Local Services Ads (LSAs) remain the highest-ROI paid channel for restoration companies, and it’s not close. LSA leads cost $35-$100 each—a fraction of standard search ads. They appear above traditional paid results. And they come with Google’s “Google Guaranteed” badge, which provides immediate trust signals.
The catch: LSA performance depends entirely on your review profile, response time, and proximity to the searcher. Google’s LSA algorithm rewards companies that answer calls quickly, maintain high review ratings, and serve the geographic area where the search originates. You can’t buy your way to the top of LSAs the way you can with search ads. You earn it through operational excellence.
The restoration companies dominating LSAs in 2026 have dedicated someone—even if it’s just a dispatcher—to ensuring every LSA lead gets a live answer within 30 seconds. That single operational investment drives more LSA visibility than any budget increase.
Quality Score: The Hidden Discount Most Restoration Companies Don’t Know Exists
Google charges different companies different prices for the same keyword. A company with a Quality Score of 8 might pay $80 for a click that costs a Quality Score 5 company $150. Same keyword, same market, same time of day. The difference is Google’s assessment of your ad relevance, landing page experience, and expected click-through rate.
Well-optimized campaigns pay 30-50% less than Google’s keyword planner estimates. That discount compounds across every click, every day, every month. Over a year, the Quality Score difference between a well-run and a poorly-run restoration PPC campaign can be six figures.
Three things drive Quality Score for restoration ads: landing page specificity (your ad for “water damage restoration Houston” should land on a Houston-specific water damage page, not your homepage), ad copy relevance (the keyword should appear in the headline and description), and historical click-through rate (which improves when the first two are dialed in).
The Landing Page Problem Nobody Talks About
Most restoration companies send PPC traffic to their homepage or a generic services page. This is the most expensive mistake in restoration digital marketing.
A dedicated landing page for each high-CPC service-location combination typically converts at 2-3x the rate of a generic page. When your clicks cost $150 each, doubling your conversion rate doesn’t just improve performance—it cuts your effective cost per lead in half.
Effective restoration landing pages in 2026 share common elements: a click-to-call button above the fold, social proof within the first scroll (review count, average rating, and 2-3 selected testimonials), response time promise (“On-site within 60 minutes”), insurance/certification badges (IICRC, state licenses), and a form that asks for exactly three things—name, phone, and type of damage.
Every additional form field reduces conversion rate by roughly 10-15%. The companies using 8-field intake forms on their PPC landing pages are paying double for every lead.
Microsoft Ads: The Restoration Industry’s Overlooked Channel
Microsoft Ads (Bing) captures roughly 8-12% of search volume depending on the market. The CPCs are typically 30-40% lower than Google for the same keywords. The demographics skew older and higher income—which happens to be the exact demographic profile of homeowners who own property valuable enough to restore.
Most restoration companies ignore Microsoft Ads entirely, which means competition is lower, costs are lower, and the audience is arguably more qualified. Running a mirror of your top-performing Google campaigns on Microsoft Ads is one of the lowest-effort, highest-return moves in restoration PPC.
Retargeting: Converting the 95% Who Didn’t Call
The average restoration PPC landing page converts 5-8% of visitors. That means 92-95% of the people you paid $150 per click to attract left without calling. Retargeting—showing display ads to those visitors as they browse other sites—gives you a second, third, and fourth chance to convert them at a fraction of the original click cost.
Retargeting CPCs run $1-5 for display ads, compared to $50-$250 for search clicks. Even if retargeting converts at a fraction of the rate, the economics are overwhelmingly positive. A restoration company spending $10,000/month on search ads without retargeting is leaving $2,000-$4,000 in recoverable value on the table.
The $10.50 Rule and When to Walk Away
Industry data shows successful restoration PPC campaigns return roughly $10.50 for every $1 invested. That’s the benchmark. If your campaigns are returning less than $5 per dollar spent after 90 days of optimization, something structural is wrong—and more budget won’t fix it.
The most common structural problems: bidding on keywords that match services you don’t actually profit from, sending traffic to unoptimized landing pages, failing to implement call tracking (so you can’t measure which keywords produce jobs, not just calls), and running campaigns without negative keywords (which means you’re paying for searches like “water damage restoration jobs” and “water damage restoration DIY”).
Fix the structure before you scale the spend. Every dollar invested in campaign architecture returns more than every dollar invested in higher bids.