This post covers what blended ROAS actually measures, why it can be misleading, when channel ROAS matters more, how to build a reporting framework that uses both, cross-channel attribution traps, and a practical decision matrix.

1. What Blended ROAS Actually Measures

Blended ROAS is simple: total revenue from all paid channels divided by total spend across all paid channels. If you spent $5,000 on Google Ads and $3,000 on Meta Ads, and together they drove $32,000 in revenue, your blended ROAS is $32,000 / $8,000 = 4.0x.

The appeal is obvious. One number that tells you whether your overall ad investment is working. It's what most CMOs and founders want to see because it cuts through the noise of individual campaigns. And for high-level budgeting decisions ("should we spend more on ads this quarter?"), it's actually pretty useful.

But it has a serious blind spot. Blended ROAS treats all dollars equally, regardless of where they came from. A dollar spent on branded search (which was going to convert anyway) counts the same as a dollar spent on cold prospecting (which created a new customer). This matters a lot when you're deciding where to put your next dollar.

2. Why Blended ROAS Can Be Misleading

Here's the scenario we see constantly. A brand reports a 5x blended ROAS and feels great about it. But when we break it down by channel:

Blended: $39,000 / $8,000 = 4.9x. Looks solid. But the Meta prospecting campaigns are below break-even for a brand with 40% margins (break-even ROAS = 2.5x). They're losing money on every Meta dollar. Branded search is propping up the entire number.

If you only look at blended ROAS, you'd think "everything is working, let's scale." But scaling means putting more money into Meta (since Google branded is already capped by search volume), and that money is going into the unprofitable channel. To understand what each channel should target, see our ROAS benchmarks by category.

Blended ROAS vs channel ROAS breakdown showing how branded search inflates blended numbers
Branded search ROAS often inflates blended numbers, hiding underperformance in prospecting channels.

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3. When Channel ROAS Matters More

Channel-level ROAS is more useful for operational decisions:

But channel ROAS has its own problem: attribution. If someone sees a Meta ad, then searches your brand on Google and buys, Google gets 100% credit and Meta gets 0%. The Meta campaign looks terrible, but it was the reason the customer existed. This is why you need both metrics.

4. A Reporting Framework That Uses Both

Here's the reporting structure we recommend to our PPC management clients:

Monthly executive report: Lead with blended ROAS and total ROI. This answers "are our ads profitable overall?" Add month-over-month trend to show direction.

Weekly operational report: Show channel-level ROAS for each platform and campaign type. Flag any channel below break-even for two consecutive weeks. Include spend share by channel so you can see if the mix is shifting.

Quarterly review: Compare blended ROAS against channel ROAS trends. If blended is flat but channel mix is shifting toward branded (lower-cost, higher-ROAS), you're not actually growing. New customer acquisition is declining even though the top-line number looks the same.

Building this into a single view makes it much easier to spot these patterns. See our guide on building a dashboard that shows real performance for how to set this up.

5. Cross-Channel Attribution Traps

Attribution is the reason blended and channel ROAS can tell different stories. Here are the traps to watch for:

Last-click bias: Google Ads uses last-click attribution by default. This means Google gets credit for conversions that Meta, email, or organic initiated. Your Google ROAS looks inflated and everything else looks worse than it is.

Double-counting: If someone clicks a Google ad AND a Meta ad before buying, both platforms claim the conversion. Your channel ROAS numbers add up to more than your actual revenue. This is normal, but it means you can't simply add channel revenues together.

View-through inflation: Meta counts "view-through" conversions by default (someone saw your ad but didn't click, then bought within 1 day). This inflates Meta ROAS. Switch to 7-day click attribution for a more honest comparison against Google.

The fix isn't perfect attribution (that doesn't exist). The fix is being consistent in how you measure, understanding the biases of each platform, and using blended ROAS as your reality check.

6. The Decision Matrix

Here's a quick framework for which metric to use for which decision:

Neither metric alone gives you the full picture. Blended ROAS tells you the "what" (are we profitable?). Channel ROAS tells you the "where" (which channels are driving that profitability?). You need both.

Frequently Asked Questions

Blended ROAS is your total revenue from all paid channels divided by total ad spend across all channels. It gives you one number that represents overall advertising efficiency. If you spent $10K across Google and Meta and generated $40K in revenue, your blended ROAS is 4x.

Use blended ROAS for business-level decisions like total budget allocation and profitability checks. Use channel ROAS for operational decisions like where to increase or decrease spend, which campaigns to restructure, and which channels to test.

This usually means one strong channel (often branded search) is masking underperformance in other channels. A 10x branded search ROAS blended with a 1.5x Meta ROAS might produce a 4x blended number that looks healthy, but Meta is actually losing money.

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