If you install HVAC systems, unclog drains, wire panels, or replace roofs, Google gives you two very different ways to buy leads — and they compete for the same searcher. Understanding how each one charges you, where it places your business, and what quality of lead it delivers is the difference between a channel that prints jobs and one that quietly burns your budget. Here's the honest, entity-by-entity comparison for 2026.
What's the difference between Local Services Ads and Google Ads?
The core difference is the billing model and placement. Local Services Ads are pay-per-lead: Google charges you only when a qualified customer calls or messages, and your listing appears in a dedicated pack above the traditional paid search ads, complete with your reviews and a Google Verified badge. Google Ads (Search campaigns and Performance Max) are pay-per-click: you bid on keywords like "emergency plumber near me," write ad copy, send clicks to a landing page, and pay whether or not that click becomes a customer.
Put simply, LSAs sell you outcomes closer to the phone ringing; Google Ads sells you traffic you then have to convert. That single distinction cascades into everything else — cost, control, and lead quality.
How much do Local Services Ads vs Google Ads cost for contractors?
On a per-lead basis, LSAs are usually the cheaper channel for the trades. Industry benchmarks compiled across hundreds of home-service advertisers in early 2026 put the average LSA lead around $53, versus a blended Google Ads cost-per-lead near $104 — and closer to $149 for non-branded search. On the click side, home-service keywords commonly run $3–$9 per click, spiking to $8–$18 for competitive remodeling terms and into the hundreds for high-value whole-home queries in dense metros.
| Factor | Local Services Ads | Google Ads (Search / Performance Max) |
|---|---|---|
| Billing model | Pay per lead (call/message) | Pay per click |
| Typical cost* | ~$40–$60 per lead by trade | ~$3–$9 CPC; ~$30–$80 per lead |
| Placement | Very top, above search ads | Below LSAs, in the ad block |
| Trust signal | Google Verified badge + reviews | None; relies on ad copy & site |
| Setup gate | License + insurance verification | Keywords, copy, landing page |
| Control | Limited — Google matches by job type & service area | Granular — keywords, geo, schedule, copy, remarketing |
| Best for | Fast, trust-driven local phone leads | Scale, brand, non-LSA services, remarketing |
*Illustrative industry benchmarks aggregated from public 2026 home-services data — not guaranteed outcomes. Your actual cost per lead varies by trade, market, reviews, and response time.
Which one gets contractors better-quality leads?
LSAs tend to deliver higher-intent, ready-to-book contacts, while Google Ads gives you more of them with more control over who you attract. Because LSA leads arrive as phone calls from people who already saw your reviews and badge, they book at a healthy clip — industry benchmarks show LSA leads booking around 44% versus roughly 38% for non-branded search. The trade-off: average ticket on LSA jobs often runs lower than on search, because search lets you target premium, high-consideration queries (full system replacements, additions, whole-home reroofs) that LSAs won't surface.
One factor beats platform choice entirely: speed to lead. Contractors who answer LSA calls within an hour book roughly twice the rate of those who call back the next day. Whichever channel you run, the phone discipline behind it decides the ROI.
Did the Google Guaranteed badge change in 2026?
Yes — and it matters for how you pitch trust. On October 20, 2025, Google consolidated its old "Google Guaranteed," "Google Screened," and "License Verified" marks into a single blue Google Verified badge. More consequentially, the consumer money-back guarantee tied to the old Google Guaranteed program was discontinued on November 7, 2025. The badge now signals that Google checked your license, insurance, and background — but no longer promises customers a refund.
For contractors, the practical takeaways are simple: keep your business license and general liability insurance current so your badge doesn't lapse, and stop marketing the "money-back guarantee" language on your site and trucks. The trust still helps you win the click; the reimbursement promise is gone.
Which should your contracting business choose?
Choose based on your goal, not tribal loyalty. Use this quick decision guide:
- Start with LSAs if you're an eligible trade (HVAC, plumbing, electrical, roofing, and 70+ other categories), you can answer the phone fast, and you want the lowest-risk cost-per-lead entry into Google.
- Add Google Ads if you need more volume than LSAs supply, you sell services or premium jobs LSAs don't cover, or you want to remarket to site visitors and control exactly which keywords and neighborhoods you show for.
- Run both if you're serious about market share — the two channels stack in the results (LSAs on top, search below), and multi-channel operators consistently report more total leads and lower blended acquisition cost than single-channel shops.
Representative composite example (a fictional, illustrative regional HVAC company — not a specific client; results are illustrative, not guaranteed): A composite mid-market heating-and-cooling contractor turned on LSAs for emergency and tune-up jobs, then layered a tightly geo-targeted Google Ads Search campaign for high-ticket system replacements. LSAs carried the cheap, high-intent call volume; Search captured the premium replacement searches LSAs never showed for. The combination illustrates the pattern we see across the trades — the channels complement rather than cannibalize.
The bottom line
There's no universal winner — there's a right sequence. Local Services Ads usually win the first dollar for eligible contractors because you pay for leads, not clicks, and you inherit Google's trust badge. Google Ads wins the next dollar when you need reach, premium jobs, and control. Get your Google Verified status locked in, answer fast, and treat the two as one lead engine rather than a coin flip.
Frequently asked questions
Are Local Services Ads cheaper than Google Ads for contractors?
Usually, yes — on a cost-per-lead basis. 2026 industry benchmarks put the average LSA lead near $53 against a blended Google Ads cost-per-lead around $104. LSAs charge only for leads, while Google Ads charges for every click regardless of outcome, so LSAs typically carry less waste for the trades.
Do you still get money back with Google Guaranteed in 2026?
No. The consumer money-back guarantee was discontinued on November 7, 2025, when Google retired the "Google Guaranteed" name in favor of the blue Google Verified badge. The badge still confirms your license, insurance, and background check, but it no longer includes a customer refund.
Can I run Local Services Ads and Google Ads at the same time?
Yes, and it's often the strongest setup. LSAs and Google Ads occupy different spots on the results page and target different intent, so running both expands total coverage. Many home-service advertisers report more leads and a lower blended cost per acquisition when the two channels run together.
Which trades are eligible for Local Services Ads?
Google supports 70+ categories, including HVAC, plumbing, electrical, roofing, garage doors, pest control, locksmiths, and movers, alongside professional, health, and automotive services. Eligibility requires passing verification — typically a valid business license and proof of general liability insurance, with workers' compensation required in some states.