How to Track Cost Per Acquisition for Travel
Every booking starts with a potential customer finding you. Whether they’re clicking a Google ad, seeing your Instagram post, or getting a referral from a friend, tracking cost per acquisition tells you how much each booking really costs. Get this wrong, and your margins disappear.
Why Cost Per Acquisition Matters for Travel
Booking values vary by destination. A luxury cruise might be worth $10,000 in commission while a weekend hotel stay is $100. Your CPA targets must match these differences.
Seasonality affects everything. Peak season bookings might cost less to acquire because demand is high. Off-season campaigns might cost more but fill inventory.
Competition is fierce. Travel is one of the most advertised industries online. CPCs for travel keywords can be expensive, making CPA tracking essential.
Referrals drive loyalty. Happy travelers refer friends. Tracking referral CPA helps you invest in customer experience over paid ads.
How to Check in GA4
Set up conversion tracking for “Booking Confirmed” or “Inquiry Submitted” in GA4. Link your Google Ads and Meta Ads accounts to import cost data. Use booking confirmation pages as conversion points and add UTM parameters to all marketing links.
Calculate CPA by dividing your spend on each channel by the number of bookings from that channel. For longer decision cycles, track cost per inquiry.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics combines data from your ad platforms, booking engine, and email marketing. You can see which destinations and campaigns generate the most bookings at the lowest cost. Questions become straightforward: “Is our Facebook spend worth it for European tours?” or “Which season should we increase ad budget for?”
You might find that Google Ads for beach destinations cost $50 per booking while adventure tours cost $80. Or that email campaigns bring repeat bookings at almost no cost. ClawAnalytics reveals this in one dashboard.
Quick Wins
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Track by destination, not just channel. Some trips sell themselves while others need more marketing push.
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Use retargeting strategically. People who visited but didn’t book often need a nudge with a special offer.
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Encourage referrals. Offer past travelers discounts for referring friends. This often costs less than paid ads.
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Watch your margins. A booking that costs $100 to acquire but generates $50 in commission is losing money.