What Is a Good Return On Ad Spend for Dropshipping?
You launch a Facebook ad for a trending product, spend $500, and generate $1,500 in orders. After product costs and fees, you net $300 profit. That 3:1 ROAS keeps your dropshipping business alive.
Why Return On Ad Spend Matters for Dropshipping
Thin margins demand efficiency. Unlike traditional retail, you cannot afford to lose money on each sale and make it up in volume.
Product testing is constant. Knowing ROAS quickly tells you which products deserve more budget.
Ad platform costs keep rising. What worked six months ago might lose money today, so tracking ROAS matters more each cycle.
Profitability varies wildly by product. A product with 50% profit margin handles ads differently than one with 20%.
How to Check in GA4
Set up enhanced e-commerce tracking. This captures product revenue, not just total revenue, helping you see which items perform.
Connect your ad platforms. Link Facebook, Google, TikTok, and any other channels to see all data in one place.
Create a custom metric for net profit. Subtract product costs and fees from revenue in your calculation.
Track return customer rate. Some dropship products have high return rates that eat into ROAS.
The Easier Way
Dropshippers need fast answers. ClawAnalytics shows ROAS per product, per ad, and per audience in seconds, not spreadsheet hours.
You might ask: Which product should I test next? Or: Is my TikTok ad better than my Facebook ad? Or: What happens to ROAS if I raise prices 10%?
ClawAnalytics keeps you ahead of the competition.
Quick Wins
Start testing at 2:1 ROAS minimum. Move quickly through products until you find winners.
Separate winning products from testing budget. Allocate most budget to proven products.
Factor in returns when calculating ROAS. A 30% return rate kills profitability.
Use video ads. They typically convert better for dropshipping products.
Retarget aggressively. Anyone who viewed your product but did not buy is a warm lead.