Med Spa Marketing
The two dominant paid channels for med spa patient acquisition work completely differently — and most med spas use the wrong one for the wrong stage. Here’s how to think about Google Ads vs. Facebook and Instagram ads, and when each actually pays off.
Every advertising channel sits somewhere on a spectrum from pure intent (the person is actively searching for what you offer) to pure interruption (you’re showing an ad to someone who wasn’t thinking about you at all). Google Ads and Meta Ads sit at opposite ends of this spectrum — and understanding that difference determines which one you should prioritize.
Google Ads — Intent
Someone just typed exactly what they want. They’ve made the decision to get Botox. They’re choosing a provider. Your ad meets them at the moment of maximum purchase intent — the highest-converting moment in any buyer’s journey.
Meta Ads — Interruption
Someone is on Instagram looking at photos. Your Botox ad appears. They weren’t thinking about it — you interrupted them. Some will click, most won’t. Of those who click, far fewer are ready to book today compared to a Google searcher.
This isn’t a knock on Meta Ads — interruption advertising has worked for decades and builds real brand awareness. But it means the two channels require different expectations, different budgets, and different ways of measuring success. See our full med spa marketing agency overview for a broader look at the channel mix.
Side by Side
| Factor | Google Ads | Meta Ads (FB/IG) |
|---|---|---|
| Buyer intent | High — person is actively searching | Low to medium — passive browsing |
| Speed to first lead | 1–2 weeks | 2–4 weeks (audience learning) |
| Cost per lead (suburban) | $35–70 | $20–50 (but lower close rate) |
| Lead quality | High — ready to book | Mixed — many just curious |
| Visual content required | No — text ads only | Yes — creative is everything |
| Brand awareness | Low | High |
| Targeting method | Keyword intent | Demographics, interests, lookalikes |
| Search volume dependency | Yes — needs local search demand | No — works in any market size |
| Best for | Immediate patient acquisition | Awareness, retargeting, promotions |
The Case for Google Ads First
If you’re deciding where to spend your first $1,500/month in paid advertising, Google Ads almost always wins for med spas. Here’s why:
People in your market are already searching “Botox near me,” “lip filler [city],” “CoolSculpting near me” every month. Google Ads puts you in front of that demand immediately — you don’t have to create it. Meta Ads require creating demand in people who weren’t thinking about the treatment, which takes longer and costs more per booked appointment.
Google Trends data shows consistent, year-round search volume for Botox and filler treatments, with seasonal spikes before spring and the holidays — predictable demand you can plan budget around.
Meta Ads for med spas often show lower cost per lead on paper — $25–40 vs $45–70 on Google. But those Meta leads close at 20–35% of the time. Google leads close at 50–70%. When you factor in the close rate, the cost per actual booked appointment is usually lower on Google despite the higher nominal CPL.
Example: 20 Meta leads at $35 each = $700 spend, 6 bookings. 10 Google leads at $60 each = $600 spend, 6 bookings. Same booked appointments, less money on Google when you count the whole funnel.
Google Ads are text-based. You can launch a high-performing campaign in 48 hours with no photos, no video, no design budget. Meta Ads live or die on creative — video and photo content showing before/afters, your team, your treatment rooms. For a new or growing practice, not having to produce content before generating patients is a significant advantage.
Just like condition-specific campaigns work for chiropractors, treatment-specific campaigns work for med spas. A Botox campaign, a filler campaign, and a laser campaign each with their own landing pages outperform a single generic “med spa” campaign. Patients searching for Botox specifically convert much better on a Botox landing page than a general med spa page.
When Meta Makes Sense
Meta Ads aren’t the wrong channel — they’re the wrong first channel for most med spas. Once you have Google Ads generating a stable flow of new patients, Meta earns its budget in specific scenarios:
People who visited your Botox landing page but didn’t book are warm leads. Meta retargeting ads — showing them a before/after photo or a limited-time offer — can bring them back at very low cost. This is Meta at its best: reaching people who’ve already shown intent.
Valentine’s Day filler promos, summer body contouring pushes, pre-holiday Botox campaigns — Meta is effective for time-limited offers because you can reach a broad local audience quickly with a compelling visual. Run these as a supplement to always-on Google campaigns, not a replacement.
In very small markets where Google search volume for your treatments is minimal (under 50 searches/month), Meta can make sense earlier because there isn’t enough Google demand to fuel a campaign. Most 805-area cities outside Santa Barbara and Ventura are right at the threshold.
If you add a treatment nobody knows about — a new laser, a new body contouring technology — people can’t search for what they’ve never heard of. Meta awareness campaigns introduce the treatment before Google search volume exists for it.
The Right Stack
The practices with the most efficient patient acquisition aren’t choosing between Google and Meta — they’re using both strategically at different stages:
Launch condition-specific Google campaigns. Get conversion tracking live. Let Smart Bidding optimize. Build stable cost per lead data. Don’t split focus or budget.
Budget: $1,200–2,500/month ad spend on Google.
Once Google is generating consistent traffic, layer in Meta retargeting for website visitors. $300–500/month in Meta spend can meaningfully lift your overall conversion rate by catching the people who visited but didn’t book.
Then add Meta prospecting for seasonal promotions as budget allows.
For a deeper look at what Google Ads specifically looks like for a med spa — campaign structure, CPL benchmarks, and what to expect in the first 90 days — see our full med spa marketing agency guide.
Start with Google Ads. People searching “Botox near me” or “CoolSculpting near me” are ready to book — Google Ads captures that intent immediately. Facebook and Instagram ads interrupt passive scrollers, which requires more creative investment and produces lower close rates. Once Google is generating stable leads, add Meta retargeting as a supplement.
Meta lead costs for med spas typically run $20–50 per form submission, but booking rates from Meta leads are 20–35% vs 50–70% from Google. The cost per actual booked appointment is often similar or higher on Meta despite the lower nominal CPL.
Both platforms restrict certain medical and cosmetic ad content. Google restricts ads for treatments that could be considered experimental or making medical claims. Meta restricts before/after imagery in some ad formats and has strict rules around body image language. Both are navigable with careful copy — a specialist agency knows the policy boundaries.
Botox and dermal fillers have the highest search volume and most direct purchase intent in most markets. Laser treatments (laser hair removal, skin resurfacing) also perform well on Google. Body contouring (CoolSculpting, EmSculpt) can work on Google but also benefits from Meta visual ads because the treatment result is more dramatic to show.
Full overview of our med spa marketing service — what we build, what results look like, and what campaigns cost.
Same Google Ads strategy applied to chiropractic — if you treat patients or run a health practice, the playbook translates directly.
The campaign structure that lowers cost per lead by 3–4× — applies equally to med spa treatment-specific campaigns.
Sources & Further Reading
Resources from Google, industry associations, and medical authorities referenced in this guide.
Meta’s official advertising policies for healthcare and wellness businesses — what’s allowed and restricted on Facebook and Instagram ads.
Professional association for medical spas — industry data on patient demographics, treatment trends, and market growth.
Google’s overview of how Search Network ads work — the intent-based advertising model that separates Google from social media platforms.
Free audit — we’ll pull search volume data for your specific treatments and market, show you what competitors are spending, and give you a realistic CPL estimate before you commit a dollar.