Lukasz Rogowski
Lukasz Rogowski — Founder, RogoLookOS
June 2026 · Lead Generation · Paid Media · Local SEO · Multi-Location Operations

Medspa Lead Benchmarks

Lead Generation  ·  Paid Media  ·  Local SEO  ·  Multi-Location Operations

Medspa Lead Benchmarks: What Multi-Location Operators Actually See in 2025

We ran a 4-location medspa group for 24 months. Not as consultants — as the team actually managing the budget, the campaigns, and the dashboard. These are the numbers that came out of that.

Before I get into the benchmarks, one thing worth stating clearly: most medspa operators don't have a CPL problem. They have a conversion infrastructure problem. A $25 CPL that books at 8% costs you $313 per patient. A $55 CPL that books at 35% costs you $157. The math changes when you build the funnel right. That's what the numbers below reflect — not just acquisition cost, but the full acquisition math.

If you want the executive summary: industry medians for medspa lead costs are running $35–$85 depending on channel and service type. Operators with proper conversion infrastructure are landing $32–$58. The gap is real, and it comes down to three things: channel mix discipline, offer specificity, and follow-up cadence. Not creative brilliance. Not a bigger budget. Those three things.

CPL Benchmarks by Service Mix

Service type is the single biggest CPL variable. Not geography. Not platform. Service type.

Injectables (Botox, Dermal Fillers)

Injectables are the entry point for most medspa operators. High demand, relatively low friction, broad appeal across age groups. The CPL economics work — but only if you're not competing on the same keywords as everyone else in your market.

Body Contouring (CoolSculpting, EMSCULPT, TruSculpt, etc.)

Body contouring is where most operators see their highest CPLs — and most give up too early. The problem isn't demand. The market for non-invasive body contouring is large and growing. The problem is the offer. "Free consultation" does not work for body contouring. Neither does "$99 first session" when you're competing against bundled pricing from clinic chains.

Facials, Skincare, Chemical Peels, Microneedling

The "gateway drug" of medspa. Lower CPL, higher volume, and critically — higher rebooking rates. This is the category that builds the patient base that eventually converts to injectables and body work.

Category Meta CPL Google Search CPL Google LSA CPL
Injectables (Botox/Filler) $22–$45 $45–$85 $35–$65
Body Contouring $40–$75 $55–$100 $45–$75
Facials / Skincare $15–$35 $35–$60 $30–$55

The variance within each category is real — market size, competition density, creative quality, and landing page conversion rate all move these numbers. Treat these as planning ranges, not absolutes.

Single-Location vs. 2–4 Locations vs. 5+ Locations

Scale changes CPL in ways that aren't intuitive. Most operators assume bigger = cheaper. Sometimes that's true. Sometimes it's not.

Single-Location Operators

Single-location medspas typically run $45–$75 CPL on Meta in mid-size markets. The challenge: limited budget, limited data, and no cross-location learnings to draw from.

What actually works for single-location operators:

2–4 Location Operators

This is where the math starts to shift. The operators we see hitting $32–$40 CPL are almost always running 2–4 locations — and the reason isn't better ad creative. It's budget consolidation and unified GBP management.

When you have two or more locations sharing a single coordinated ad account:

The CPL range for 2–4 location operators running coordinated campaigns: $32–$58. The low end of that range is achievable with a working offer, disciplined location targeting, and a GBP management system.

5+ Location Operators

This is where most operators oversimplify. "We have more locations, we should get cheaper leads" — not how it works. The complexity goes up faster than the efficiency gains.

CPL range for 5+ location operators: $28–$55, but the variance is wider because execution quality varies more. With 5+ locations, you typically see:

What the 4-location medspa group we worked with learned: the first 90 days of a multi-location engagement should be GBP unification and brand compliance, not ad spend escalation. The CPL reduction came after the infrastructure was in place — not before.

Lead-to-Consult-Booked and Consult-to-Treatment-Sold

CPL is the ceiling. Conversion rate is the floor. Operators who only track CPL are managing half the problem.

Lead-to-Consult-Booked

Industry median: 20–35%. RogoLook clients: 28–42%.

The gap isn't about the leads. It's about the offer and the follow-up sequence.

What moves lead-to-booked rates:

  1. Specificity of the offer. "Book a consultation" is not an offer. "$50 off your first Botox treatment — book your assessment this week" is an offer. Specificity creates urgency and commitment.
  2. Response time. Leads who get a text or call within 5 minutes book at 3× the rate of leads who get a response 30 minutes later. If your follow-up is manual, you are leaving appointments on the table.
  3. SMS confirmation sequence. A lead who books and then receives a confirmation text with date, time, and "what to expect at your appointment" shows up at dramatically higher rates than one who gets an email confirmation alone.

The math: if your CPL is $45 and your lead-to-consult rate is 20%, your cost-per-booked-consultation is $225. Improving to 35% drops it to $129. That's before any treatment is sold.

Consult-to-Treatment-Sold

Industry median: 50–65%. RogoLook clients: 60–75%.

The consult is where the actual patient relationship starts. The conversion from consult to first treatment is mostly a consultation quality and pricing transparency problem.

What moves consult-to-treatment-sold rates:

The full-funnel math: $45 CPL × 35% consult rate × 65% treatment conversion = $197 cost per treatment patient. That's the number that matters for your P&L.

Channel Mix That Actually Works

The question I get most from medspa operators: "Should we be on Meta or Google?"

The answer is almost always: both, in a specific order, with specific campaigns, and not equal budget allocations.

Meta (Facebook + Instagram)

What it's good for: Awareness, consideration, and retargeting. Broad audience reach at relatively efficient CPL for injectables and skincare. Instagram specifically performs better for visual treatments — before/afters, skin transformations, laser results.

The honest tradeoff: Meta leads have a longer consideration cycle. You're creating desire, not capturing existing demand. This means:

CPL range: $22–$55. The low end requires a specific offer, a treatment-specific landing page, and retargeting active engagers.

Google Local Services Ads (LSAs)

What they're good for: High-intent, immediate-need traffic. "Medspa near me open now" type searches. LSA leads tend to be more ready-to-book than Meta leads — they're not in a browsing mindset, they're in a decision mindset.

The honest tradeoff: LSA leads are more expensive per inquiry than traditional Google Search, and the lead quality varies. You're getting more people who want to book, but not necessarily people who've done their research on your specific treatments.

Best for: Operators who want to fill a specific consultation slot fast (e.g., "We have three openings this week and need to fill them"). Less effective as a steady-volume channel unless you're running LSA + search together.

CPL range: $35–$65. Varies significantly by market and treatment category.

Organic GMB + Local SEO

This is the channel most medspa operators underinvest in — and the ones who build it correctly see the best long-term unit economics.

What it's good for: Compound growth. A GMB listing with 60+ reviews, weekly posts, and correct category/service setup will produce leads at near-zero marginal cost 12–18 months after setup. The first 6 months are slow. The months 12–24 are strong.

The honest tradeoff: You cannot shortcut organic local SEO. If someone tells you they can get you to the top of Google Maps in 30 days, they are selling you something that doesn't work long-term. The real play is:

For the 4-location medspa group we ran: by month 18, organic search was generating 31% of total lead volume. That reduced paid dependency significantly and dropped aggregate CPL across all locations.

Seasonality: When the Volume Comes and Goes

Medspa marketing has real seasonal patterns. Budget allocation and campaign planning should reflect this — most operators run the same budget and creative across all months and leave significant opportunity on the table.

Q1: New Year Surge (January – March)

The clearest seasonal spike in medspa. "New Year, new me" drives significant volume increases across injectables, skin rejuvenation, and body contouring.

Summer: Body-Prep Season (April – June)

Volume shift from facial/injectable to body contouring. The "summer body" search intent starts in April and peaks in May-June.

Q3: Steady State + Back-to-School (July – September)

The least exciting quarter in medspa, and the most underestimated. Most operators de-emphasize marketing in Q3 because volume is lower. This is a mistake.

Q4: Holiday Gift Card Pull (October – December)

The fastest revenue quarter for most medspas — and one where marketing investment has the best return-per-dollar.

What the 3.4× / −42% Playbook Actually Looks Like

We ran a 4-location medspa group for 24 months. Lead volume up 3.4×. CPL down 42%. 94% of locations ranking in Google Maps top-3.

Here's what actually drove those numbers — not the framework, not the theory. The actual mechanics.

GBP first. Before we touched a single ad campaign, we rebuilt all 4 Google Business Profiles. Correct categories, service-specific posts twice a week, review response within 24 hours, photo updates every two weeks. The GBP investment took 6 weeks to show up in the data — and then it showed up in every metric. Maps presence drove consultations at a higher rate than paid search once trust signals were established. That shouldn't have surprised us, but it did.

Location-specific campaigns. The original setup was one shared Meta ad account with no location targeting. Every dollar was being shown to the same 50-mile radius across all 4 locations — so locations were bidding against their own campaigns. Splitting into 4 separate ad accounts with location-specific audiences dropped CPL immediately, before any creative changes.

Offer specificity. The campaigns that ran "$50 off your first Botox treatment" converted at roughly half the CPL of campaigns that ran "Book a consultation." Specificity does not just improve click-through rate — it improves lead quality, which improves consult-to-treatment-sold rate, which improves the full-funnel economics.

The 90-day brand compliance window. Before we scaled any ad spend, we spent 90 days on brand compliance across all 4 locations. Same visual standards, same offer cadence, same GBP posting system, same review management process. Scaling spend on broken infrastructure just burns budget faster.

Continuous tuning. Monthly budget reallocation based on CPL and booking rate data per location. The campaigns that were winning got more budget; the campaigns that were underperforming got adjusted or paused. This is not a "set and forget" system — it's an operating rhythm.

The playbook behind it all is the same one we use for every multi-location operator we work with. If you're running 2+ medspa locations and your marketing is not centralized, your CPL is probably 30–40% higher than it needs to be.
Selective intake

This page is a resource, not a pitch. We work with a limited number of medspa operators at a time — one new client per month, selective intake. If you're running a multi-location medspa operation and the numbers above sound familiar, let's talk.