Stevie Morris Digital Marketing1

07410 907 104

2 February 2026

Google Ads Management Cost UK: What You Actually Pay in 2026

Google Ads Management Cost UK: What You Actually Pay in 2026

Meta Description: UK Google Ads management costs £500-£2000/month typically. Here's what agencies, consultants, and freelancers actually charge—and what you get for your money.

Target Keywords: google ads management cost uk, ppc management fees, google ads consultant pricing, how much does google ads management cost

Category: PPC Paid Ads

Estimated Reading Time: 11 minutes


I get asked this almost weekly: "How much should I be paying for Google Ads management?"

And I reckon it's one of the most poorly explained things in PPC. Agencies don't want to publish their fees. Consultants all charge differently. And Google certainly isn't going to tell you what's reasonable.

So here's the honest breakdown. What UK businesses actually pay for Google Ads management in 2026, what you get for that money, and how to know if you're being ripped off.


The Short Answer

Most UK businesses pay between £500-£2,000 per month for Google Ads management.

But that range is bloody useless without context, isn't it? A local plumber spending £800/month on ads pays different fees than an ecommerce business spending £15,000/month.

The real answer depends on:

  • Your monthly ad spend
  • Campaign complexity (1 campaign vs 10)
  • Who's managing it (agency, consultant, or freelancer)
  • What pricing model they use
  • Let me break down each one.


    The 4 Pricing Models (And What They Actually Mean)

    Pricing Models Visualization

    1. Percentage of Ad Spend

    How it works: The manager takes 10-20% of your monthly ad budget.

    Example: You spend £5,000/month on ads. At 15%, you pay £750/month management fee.

    Who uses it: Mostly agencies. Some established consultants.

    The good:

  • Scales with your spend
  • Aligns incentives (theoretically—they succeed when you spend more)
  • Simple to calculate
  • The bad:

  • You pay more as spend increases, even if the work doesn't increase proportionally
  • Creates perverse incentive to increase your budget rather than improve efficiency
  • Penalises you for successful scaling
  • I've seen businesses paying £3,000/month in management fees on £15k ad spend. That's 20%. The agency was doing maybe 5 hours of work per month. That's £600/hour.

    Industry standard in the UK: 10-20% with a minimum monthly fee (usually £500-£1,000).


    2. Flat Monthly Fee

    How it works: Fixed price per month, regardless of ad spend.

    Example: £1,200/month whether you spend £3k or £10k on ads.

    Who uses it: Consultants, freelancers, some smaller agencies.

    The good:

  • Predictable costs
  • No incentive to inflate your budget
  • Better for businesses with variable spend (seasonal, testing phases)
  • The bad:

  • Might overpay if your ad spend is tiny
  • Might underpay (and get deprioritised) if your spend is huge
  • Doesn't automatically scale with complexity
  • Typical UK pricing:

  • Simple accounts (1-2 campaigns): £500-£800/month
  • Standard accounts (3-5 campaigns): £1,000-£1,500/month
  • Complex accounts (5+ campaigns, multiple products): £1,500-£3,000/month
  • This is what I use. Transparent, predictable, and my success comes from getting you better results—not convincing you to spend more.


    3. Hourly Rate

    How it works: Pay for actual hours worked, usually tracked monthly.

    Example: £75/hour × 10 hours = £750/month

    Who uses it: Freelance consultants, specialists brought in for specific projects.

    The good:

  • Only pay for work done
  • Great for one-off projects (audits, setups, troubleshooting)
  • Transparent on time allocation
  • The bad:

  • Unpredictable monthly costs
  • Incentivises slow work (more hours = more money)
  • Hard to budget for ongoing management
  • UK hourly rates:

  • Junior freelancer: £40-£60/hour
  • Experienced consultant: £75-£125/hour
  • Senior agency strategist: £100-£150/hour
  • Hourly works for project-based stuff. It's rubbish for ongoing management.


    4. Hybrid (Flat Fee + Percentage)

    How it works: Base fee + smaller percentage of spend.

    Example: £500/month + 10% of ad spend. On £3k spend, you pay £500 + £300 = £800/month total.

    Who uses it: Agencies trying to balance predictability with scalability.

    The good:

  • Lower percentage than pure percentage model
  • Base fee covers minimum work
  • Scales somewhat with spend
  • The bad:

  • More complex to calculate
  • Still has the percentage-based perverse incentive (though diluted)
  • Typical UK structure: £300-£800 base + 5-15% of spend.

    It's a compromise. Not terrible, but I prefer pure flat fee for clarity.


    What You Actually Get for Your Money

    Service Tiers Visualization

    Here's what you should expect at different price points:

    £300-£500/month

    Typical setup: Solo freelancer, basic campaigns, minimal spend.

    What you get:

  • Weekly check-ins (15-30 mins)
  • Bid adjustments
  • Basic reporting (monthly)
  • Reactive fixes when things break
  • What you don't get:

  • Proactive optimisation
  • Detailed testing
  • Strategic planning
  • Quick response times
  • Good for: Very small businesses (under £1k/month ad spend), simple campaigns, stable performance needing light maintenance.

    Red flag: If they're charging this for a £10k/month ad budget, you're getting robbed of attention.


    £800-£1,500/month

    Typical setup: Experienced consultant or small agency, moderate complexity.

    What you get:

  • Proper account management (not just monitoring)
  • Weekly optimisations (search terms, bids, budgets) including proper negative keyword management
  • Monthly strategy calls
  • A/B testing of ads and landing pages
  • Detailed monthly reports with recommendations
  • Conversion tracking setup and maintenance
  • What you don't get:

  • Dedicated account team (you get one person, maybe two)
  • Custom creative/design work
  • Multiple rounds of revisions on everything
  • Good for: Most SMEs. £2k-£15k/month ad spend. 2-8 campaigns. Service businesses, local companies, small ecommerce.

    This is the sweet spot for most UK businesses. You're getting real expertise without agency bloat.


    £2,000-£5,000/month

    Typical setup: Mid-size agency or senior consultant, complex multi-channel campaigns.

    What you get:

  • Dedicated account manager
  • Weekly optimisation + strategic oversight
  • Bi-weekly or weekly calls
  • Advanced testing (landing pages, audiences, creative)
  • CRM integration and enhanced conversions setup
  • Performance Max + Search + Shopping coordination
  • Quarterly strategy reviews
  • What you don't get:

  • Creative team (copywriters, designers) included—usually extra
  • Tech development (tracking scripts, custom integrations)
  • Good for: Larger businesses. £15k-£50k/month ad spend. Multiple product lines, multi-location, or complex funnels.

    You're paying for experience and dedicated attention. Worth it if your spend justifies it.


    £5,000+/month

    Typical setup: Full-service agency, enterprise-level complexity.

    What you get:

  • Account team (manager, strategist, analyst)
  • Custom creative and copywriting
  • Advanced attribution modelling
  • Full-funnel strategy
  • Integration with broader marketing (SEO, email, social)
  • White-glove service
  • Good for: Enterprise. £50k+/month ad spend. National or international campaigns.

    Watch out for: You're paying for overhead. Make sure you're getting senior people actually managing your account, not farming it to juniors.


    Agency vs Consultant vs Freelancer: What's the Difference?

    Team Structure Comparison

    Let me break down what you actually get with each:

    Agencies (£1,000-£10,000+/month)

    What they offer:

  • Full team: strategist, account manager, analyst, sometimes creative
  • Cross-client insights ("we've seen this work for similar businesses")
  • Continuity (if your account manager leaves, someone else takes over)
  • More services under one roof (SEO, paid social, creative)
  • The reality:

  • You're often managed by a junior (the senior sold you, then disappeared)
  • Higher minimums (many won't touch accounts under £5k/month spend)
  • Slower communication (everything goes through account managers)
  • You're one of 20-50+ clients
  • Best for: Businesses that want multiple services bundled, or those with budgets over £20k/month.


    Independent Consultants (£500-£2,500/month)

    What they offer:

  • Senior expertise (you get the person who sold you the service)
  • Hands-on management (they're in the account, not delegating to juniors)
  • Flexible, personalised approach
  • Usually better value per pound spent
  • The reality:

  • Limited bandwidth (one person can only manage so many accounts well)
  • If they're on holiday or ill, work stops
  • Usually no in-house creative team
  • May need you to coordinate with your web developer for tracking
  • Best for: SMEs that value expertise over breadth. £2k-£20k/month ad spend. Businesses that want accountability and direct access.

    This is what I do. And I'm biased, but I think it's the best model for most businesses.


    Freelancers (£300-£1,200/month)

    What they offer:

  • Lowest cost option
  • Flexible arrangements
  • Often specialists in one area (Shopping ads, lead gen, etc.)
  • The reality:

  • Extremely variable quality (some are excellent ex-agency people; some learned PPC on YouTube last month)
  • Often juggling many clients or doing this part-time
  • Limited capacity for complex accounts
  • May disappear with little notice
  • Best for: Very small budgets. Simple campaigns. Businesses willing to stay involved and provide direction.


    Setup Fees: Should You Pay Them?

    Many agencies and consultants charge £500-£2,000 to set up new campaigns from scratch.

    My take: This is fair if they're actually building campaigns, implementing tracking, and doing proper keyword research.

    What's reasonable:

  • Account audit and strategy: £300-£800
  • Campaign build (2-3 campaigns): £500-£1,200
  • Full setup with conversion tracking, GA4, enhanced conversions: £1,000-£2,500
  • Red flags:

  • Setup fee but no ongoing management (they just want your money upfront)
  • "Setup" is literally using Google's automated campaign builder
  • They charge setup but then lock you into a 12-month contract
  • I don't charge setup fees for ongoing clients. It's part of onboarding. But I'll charge for standalone audits or if you want a full account rebuild with no commitment.


    Pricing Red Flags

    Watch out for these:

    1. "We only charge 5% of ad spend!"

    Sounds great until you realise there's a £2,500 minimum monthly fee. Or they're encouraging you to spend £50k/month when you should be spending £10k.

    2. Long-term contracts with no out clause

    12-month contracts are common, but you should have a performance-based out after 3-6 months. If they won't budge, they're not confident in their results.

    Before you commit to anyone, run a thorough audit of your account to understand what actually needs fixing.

    3. Hidden extras

    "Management fee is £800, but reporting is £200 extra, and landing page changes are £100/hour."

    Everything should be clear upfront.

    4. Success fees or commission on sales

    "We'll manage for free, just give us 10% of revenue!"

    This sounds good but creates awful incentives. They'll push for volume over profit.

    5. Wildly cheap offers

    "£200/month for full Google Ads management!"

    You're either getting an offshore VA who's managing 50 accounts, or you're getting 2 hours of actual work per month. Neither is good.


    How to Choose the Right Option

    Here's my decision framework:

    If your ad spend is under £1,500/month:
    DIY with some consultant hours for setup and quarterly reviews. Or hire a freelancer at £300-£500/month for light maintenance.

    If your ad spend is £1,500-£5,000/month:
    Hire an experienced consultant or small specialist agency. Flat fee £800-£1,200/month.

    If your ad spend is £5,000-£20,000/month:
    Hire a senior consultant or boutique agency. £1,200-£2,500/month.

    If your ad spend is over £20,000/month:
    Mid-size agency with a dedicated team, or a consultant who specialises in your vertical. £2,500-£5,000/month+.


    What I Charge (And Why)

    Since we're being transparent: I charge flat monthly fees based on account complexity, not ad spend.

    Typical range: £1,200-£2,500/month for most SME accounts.

    Why flat fee?

  • No incentive to inflate your budget
  • Predictable for you, fair for me
  • Reward is getting you better results, not bigger spend
  • What's included:

  • Weekly account optimisation (search terms, negative keywords, bid adjustments)
  • Conversion tracking setup and maintenance
  • Monthly strategy calls
  • Unlimited email support
  • Detailed monthly reports
  • What's not included:

  • Creative design (but I'll write ad copy)
  • Web development (I'll tell you what needs fixing)
  • Paid social or SEO (I do Google Ads, that's it)
  • I work with about 10-15 clients at a time. That's it. Quality over quantity.


    The Bottom Line

    Most UK businesses should expect to pay £800-£1,500/month for competent Google Ads management if you're spending £3k-£10k/month on ads.

    If you're paying significantly less, you're probably getting what you pay for. If you're paying significantly more, make sure you're actually getting senior expertise and dedicated attention—not subsidising an agency's overhead.

    And if someone won't tell you their pricing upfront? Walk away. Transparency on pricing usually reflects transparency on results.

    Want to know what your account would cost to manage properly? Get in touch. I'll give you a straight answer—even if it's "you don't need me yet."


    Related Articles

    How to Audit a Google Ads Account: The Complete Checklist - Before hiring anyone, audit your current setup to see what needs fixing.

    Why Negative Keywords Are More Important Than Ever - One of the first things any good consultant should tackle in your account.

    The Rat Farm Effect: Why Chasing Wrong Metrics Kills PPC Profit - Make sure whoever you hire optimises for profit, not vanity metrics.


    Sources

  • Google Ads Management Cost UK - SearchHog
  • UK Google Ads Costs 2026 - Maple Forest
  • PPC Management Pricing 2026 - CyberOptik
  • Google Ads Management Pricing - Bootstrap Creative
  • PPC Pricing Models - PPC.io
  • UK Google Ads Management Pricing - PPC Geeks
  • Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Get In Touch 

    07410 907104

    CONTACT Stevie Morris

    © Stevie Morris 2024. All Rights Reserved.
    envelopearrow-downmenu-circle linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram