A fresh coat of paint transforms a home. But are you transforming your revenue? Average Order Value tells you how much you’re making on each job.
Why Average Order Value Matters for Painting
Painting seems simple. Paint, brushes, labor. But the range between a $500 room touch-up and a $15,000 whole-house repaint is massive.
Every room is an upsell opportunity. Baseboards, ceilings, doors, cabinets. Most customers don’t think of these until you mention them.
It reveals your pricing sweet spot. If your AOV is $1,500 but some jobs hit $5,000, you know what customers are willing to pay for quality and scope.
It helps you schedule smarter. Larger projects justify longer timelines. Knowing AOV helps you balance quick wins against big jobs.
It improves material ordering. When you know average project size, you order paint in bulk rather than making multiple trips to the paint store.
How to Check in GA4
GA4 tracks Average Order Value for online payments.
- Log into GA4
- Go to Monetization > Ecommerce overview
- Find Average Order Value
- Break down by product category or traffic source
The limitation: GA4 won’t capture most painting revenue since payments happen offline.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics pulls your project data from invoicing or field service software. It calculates real AOV automatically from completed jobs.
You can ask: “What’s my AOV for interior versus exterior painting?” or “Show me my Average Order Value trend by month.” ClawAnalytics makes tracking effortless.
Another valuable query: “What’s my average room count per interior job?” Use this to standardize your bidding process.
Quick Wins
Upsell premium paint. Benjamin Moore and Sherwin-Williams have better margins than basic paints. Show samples and explain the difference.
Add prep work to every job. Caulking, patching, sanding. These services raise the ticket and improve results.
Offer add-on services. Cabinet painting, deck staining, pressure washing. Same crew, more revenue per visit.
Create room packages. “Interior painting for a 2,000 sq ft home” sounds more professional than guessing by the room.