How Much Should a Law Firm Spend on Marketing in Australia?

How Much Should a Law Firm Spend on Marketing in Australia?

Marketing is one of the most debated line items in any law firm’s budget. Spend too little and your pipeline dries up. Spend too much on the wrong channels and you’ve burned cash that could have gone to staff, technology, or your own pocket.

So what’s the right number? And more importantly β€” where should that money actually go?

In this guide we break down how much Australian law firms are spending on marketing, what the benchmarks say, which channels deliver the best return, and how a pay-per-lead model can let you grow your practice without the guesswork of a traditional marketing budget.

πŸ“Œ Key Takeaway: Most Australian law firms should allocate between 2–10% of gross revenue to marketing, depending on size and growth stage. But the percentage matters far less than where you spend it β€” and whether you can track what’s working.

What Do the Benchmarks Say?

There’s no single universal rule, but industry benchmarks give us a useful starting point. Based on data from legal industry research and marketing surveys across Australian and comparable markets:

Firm Type Recommended Marketing Spend Notes
Solo practitioner 5–10% of revenue Higher % needed to build initial client base
Small firm (2–10 lawyers) 4–7% of revenue Focus on consistent pipeline building
Mid-size firm (10–50 lawyers) 2–5% of revenue Can leverage brand recognition and referrals more
Large firm (50+ lawyers) 2–4% of revenue Brand already established; focus on retention and referrals
New practice (0–2 years) 10–20% of revenue Aggressive early spend needed to establish presence

These are guidelines, not hard rules. A criminal law firm in a competitive metro market will need to spend more aggressively than a specialist conveyancer in a regional town with strong word-of-mouth referrals.

Where Are Australian Law Firms Actually Spending Their Marketing Budget?

Most law firms spread their marketing budget across several channels. Here’s a realistic breakdown of how Australian firms typically allocate spend β€” and what each channel actually delivers:

Channel Typical Monthly Cost Average Time to ROI Lead Quality
Google Ads (Search) $2,000–$15,000+ Immediate Medium β€” lots of tyre-kickers
SEO & Content Marketing $1,500–$6,000 6–18 months High (when it works)
Social Media Ads $500–$3,000 2–6 weeks Low–Medium
Legal Directories $300–$2,000 3–6 months Low β€” shared with competitors
Website Design/Maintenance $200–$1,000 Ongoing Foundation (not a lead source)
Networking & Events $200–$1,500 Unpredictable High β€” but not scalable
Pay-Per-Lead (The Lawyer Leads) Pay only per lead received Immediate High β€” filtered & exclusive

The Hidden Cost Most Law Firms Ignore: Your Time

When law firms calculate their marketing budget, they almost always focus on dollar spend. What they rarely account for is the cost of their own time.

Consider: if your hourly billing rate is $350/hour and you spend 5 hours a week on marketing activities β€” writing content, managing ads, following up cold leads, attending networking events β€” that’s $1,750 worth of billable time lost every single week. Over a year, that’s $91,000.

πŸ’‘ The real question isn’t “how much should I spend on marketing?” β€” it’s “how much of my time and money am I spending to acquire each new client, and is there a more efficient way?”

This is exactly why more Australian lawyers are turning to pay-per-lead models β€” not just to save money, but to reclaim their time. When qualified leads arrive in your inbox in real time, you spend your energy on intake and legal work, not marketing.

How to Calculate Your Cost Per Client Acquisition

Before you set any marketing budget, you need to know your Cost Per Client Acquisition (CPCA) β€” how much you currently spend to win one new client. Here’s the simple formula:

COST PER CLIENT ACQUISITION

Total Monthly Marketing Spend Γ· New Clients Won = CPCA

Example: $3,000 spend Γ· 6 new clients = $500 per client acquired

Once you know your CPCA, you can compare it against the average value of a new client in each practice area. For example:

Practice Area Avg. Client Value (AUD) Acceptable CPCA Range
Personal Injury $5,000–$50,000+ Up to $1,500
Family Law $3,000–$30,000 Up to $800
Criminal Law $2,000–$15,000 Up to $600
Immigration Law $2,500–$12,000 Up to $600
Wills & Estates $500–$5,000 Up to $200
Commercial Law $5,000–$100,000+ Up to $2,000

If your current CPCA is higher than what your practice area can justify, it’s time to rethink your marketing mix.

The Problem With Fixed Marketing Budgets for Law Firms

Traditional marketing channels β€” Google Ads, SEO agencies, directories β€” all require fixed monthly spend regardless of results. You pay your $3,000 SEO retainer whether you get 10 leads or zero that month. You pay your Google Ads budget whether your campaigns convert or not.

This creates a fundamental misalignment: the agency or platform gets paid either way, but your firm only wins when a new client signs up.

Why Pay-Per-Lead Changes the Equation

A pay-per-lead model completely realigns this dynamic. You only spend money when a real enquiry arrives. There are no wasted months, no retainers for underperforming campaigns, and no minimum commitments.

For a growing law firm, this means your marketing spend scales directly with your intake capacity. Busy period? Order more leads. Quieter month? Pause or reduce. It’s the most flexible client acquisition model available to Australian lawyers today.

βœ… With The Lawyer Leads: You set your budget, choose your practice areas, apply your filters, and receive exclusive enquiries in real time. Spend exactly what you want, when you want β€” with zero lock-in.

How to Build a Smart Marketing Budget for Your Law Firm

Rather than picking a percentage and dividing it up arbitrarily, here’s a practical framework for building a marketing budget that actually works:

1
Calculate your current CPCA
Know what you’re spending per new client across every channel before making any changes.
2
Identify your highest-value practice areas
Focus marketing spend on the cases that generate the most revenue per matter, not just the most volume.
3
Audit what’s actually generating clients
Ask every new client how they found you. You may discover your most expensive channel is your least effective.
4
Shift budget toward performance-based channels
Reduce fixed retainer spend on channels you can’t measure. Increase investment in pay-per-lead, where spend ties directly to results.
5
Review quarterly, not annually
The legal market shifts. Review your marketing performance every quarter and reallocate budget based on what’s working.

Frequently Asked Questions

Question Answer
Should I hire an in-house marketing person or outsource? For most small firms, outsourcing to specialists or using a pay-per-lead platform is more cost-effective than a full-time hire until revenue exceeds $1.5M+.
Is Google Ads worth it for law firms in Australia? It can be, but legal keywords are among the most expensive in Australia ($80–$300+ per click). It requires expert management and a high conversion rate website to be profitable.
How quickly can I expect results from pay-per-lead? Leads arrive in real-time from day one. Most firms begin converting leads within their first week of using The Lawyer Leads platform.
What’s a good conversion rate for legal leads? Industry average for inbound legal leads is 20–40%. Exclusive, filtered leads (like those from The Lawyer Leads) typically convert at the higher end when followed up promptly.
Should marketing costs be written off as a business expense? Yes β€” marketing expenses for your law practice are generally tax deductible in Australia. Consult your accountant to ensure proper categorisation.

The Bottom Line

There’s no magic number for how much your law firm should spend on marketing. The right budget depends on your size, growth stage, practice area, and β€” most importantly β€” how efficiently you’re converting spend into signed clients.

What we do know is that the traditional model of fixed monthly retainers for SEO agencies and Google Ads campaigns β€” with no performance guarantees β€” is an increasingly poor fit for most Australian law firms.

The smarter approach is to move as much of your marketing budget as possible into performance-based channels where you only pay when results arrive. That’s exactly what The Lawyer Leads is built for.

Stop Paying for Marketing That Doesn’t Convert

Create your free account on The Lawyer Leads today. Set your practice area, apply your filters, and only pay for the exclusive enquiries you actually receive.

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The Lawyer Leads is a lead generation platform connecting Australian lawyers and law firms with prospective clients. All figures cited are indicative industry estimates. Consult a qualified marketing or financial adviser for advice specific to your firm.