Meta Ads for Tradies in Australia: Turn a Modest Budget Into Booked Jobs

Done properly, Meta ads can be a reliable source of booked work for a trade business — but only if the offer, the targeting and the follow-up are right. Here is what actually works for tradies, and the mistakes that waste budgets.

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Most tradies who try Facebook ads do one of two things: boost a post for A$20 and wonder why nothing happened, or hand over a few hundred dollars to someone who runs a vague campaign and shows them "reach" instead of jobs. Done properly, Meta ads can be a reliable source of booked work for a trade business — but only if the offer, the targeting and the follow-up are right. This is the plain-English version of how Meta ads work for tradies and local service businesses in Australia.

Why Meta ads work for trades at all

It is a fair question. If someone needs a plumber right now, they search Google — that is where urgent, high-intent jobs come from. So what is Meta for? Meta ads put your work in front of local homeowners who are not searching yet but will need you soon, or who have a job they have been putting off. A good before-and-after photo of a deck, a patio, a bathroom or a clean-up lands in the feed of someone in your suburb and plants the idea. That is demand generation, and for bigger-ticket trade jobs it can be cheaper than competing for expensive Google clicks.

The offer is everything

The number one reason trade Meta ads fail is a weak offer. "Call us for a quote" is not an offer — it is what everyone says. A specific, low-friction offer gives the homeowner a reason to act now: a free on-site assessment, a fixed-price seasonal special, a fast quote within 24 hours, or a genuine package deal. You are not discounting your work; you are lowering the barrier to the first conversation.

We ran a Meta lead campaign for a Brisbane patio builder, Dam Good Patios, that delivered leads at A$13.58 each — 14 leads from a A$190 campaign. A focused offer, real photos of the work, and a fast destination turned a modest budget into real enquiries. That is the only client result we attach a number to, because it is the only one we have measured and verified.

For a tradie, the offer and the photos decide the campaign. Real before-and-after shots of your own jobs beat any stock image or clever headline.

The four things that make trade Meta ads work

1. Real photos and video of your own work. Before-and-after shots, a short clip of a job in progress, the finished result in a recognisable local setting. Authenticity out-performs polish every time in the trades.

2. A tight local audience. Target the suburbs you actually service. There is no point paying to reach people an hour outside your area.

3. A fast lead form or landing page. Most homeowners see your ad on a phone. A slow page or a clunky form loses them. Capture the enquiry quickly and make the phone number tappable.

4. Fast follow-up. A Meta lead goes cold quickly. The trades that win call back within the hour. A great campaign feeding a slow phone is wasted money.

What it costs a trade business

You control the budget. Most local trade businesses start somewhere around A$15–$30 a day behind one strong offer, which is enough for Meta to gather data and produce a steady trickle of leads without big risk. The cost per lead depends on your offer, your photos and how big the job is — higher-value work like patios, decks, landscaping or renovations tends to justify a higher cost per lead because one job pays for a lot of advertising.

Running Meta and Google together is the common-sense play for trades: Google catches the urgent searches this week while Meta builds a pipeline of homeowners thinking about their next project. Over time more of your work comes from a system you control rather than from hoping referrals keep flowing.

The mistakes that waste trade ad budgets

  • Boosting a post instead of running a real campaign. The boost button is the most expensive way to learn nothing.
  • A vague offer. "Get a quote" gives no reason to act now.
  • Stock photos. Homeowners can spot them, and they kill trust instantly.
  • Slow follow-up. A lead you call back tomorrow has already rung your competitor.
  • Stopping and starting. Constantly pausing resets the learning and pushes costs up.

If you are weighing it up right now

Start with one strong, specific offer, a handful of real photos of your best jobs, a tight local audience, and a commitment to call every lead back fast. Run it for a month on a modest budget with conversion tracking on, and judge it on booked jobs, not likes. If the maths works, you scale; if it does not, you have learned cheaply.

If you would like a straight read on whether Meta ads suit your trade — and what offer would actually pull enquiries in your area — run our free audit or book a no-pressure strategy call. We will tell you honestly whether Meta ads, Google Ads, or local SEO is the right first move for your business.

Mitchell Knight, Founder of Soaringwebs
Written by

Mitchell Knight

Founder & Lead Strategist, Soaringwebs

Mitchell founded Soaringwebs in 2024 after a decade running web, ads and SEO for Australian small businesses. He writes about paid media, local SEO, and the craft of fast websites — and personally works on the Brisbane sites we build every week.

[03] — FAQ

The ones we always get.

  • Yes, when they are run properly. Meta ads put real photos of your work in front of local homeowners who are not searching yet but will need you soon, which makes them good for demand generation, especially for higher-value jobs like patios, decks and renovations. The campaign lives or dies on the offer, the photos, tight local targeting and fast follow-up.

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