"How much should I spend on marketing?" It's the question we get asked most often by small business owners. The answer depends on your goals, industry, and growth stage—but there are solid benchmarks to guide you.
Here's a practical breakdown based on real data and what we've seen work for local businesses.
How Much Should You Actually Spend?
According to Gartner's 2025 CMO Spend Survey, marketing budgets have stabilized at 7.7% of overall company revenue—unchanged from 2024 but down from 9.1% in 2023.
But here's the reality for small businesses: 66.3% of small business owners spend less than $1,000 on marketing each year. That's often nowhere near enough to compete.
The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) recommends businesses with less than $5 million in annual revenue should allocate 7-8% of gross revenue toward marketing to build brand awareness and acquire customers.
The Revenue Percentage Method
Here's how marketing spend typically breaks down by business type:
- B2B companies: 2-5% of revenue (some up to 9.4% in 2025)
- B2C companies: 5-10% of revenue
- New/growth-focused businesses: Up to 12-20% of revenue
- Established/maintenance mode: 5-7% of revenue
"While many companies spend just 1-3% of their gross revenue on marketing, they often struggle to maintain growth as a result."
Real Numbers for Small Businesses
Let's put this in concrete terms:
- $500K revenue business: $35,000-$50,000/year marketing budget ($2,900-$4,200/month)
- $1M revenue business: $70,000-$100,000/year ($5,800-$8,300/month)
- $2M revenue business: $140,000-$200,000/year ($11,600-$16,600/month)
Where to Allocate Your Budget
Based on 2024 B2B marketing data, here's how successful businesses allocate their marketing spend:
- Paid media (ads): 23-30% of budget
- Marketing technology: 27.9% of budget
- Creative development: 21% of budget
- Events and sponsorships: 18% of budget
For local businesses specifically, we recommend prioritizing:
- Website: Your 24/7 salesperson—invest in speed and conversion optimization
- Local SEO: Free organic traffic once you're ranking
- Google Ads: Immediate visibility while SEO builds
- Social media: Brand building and community engagement
Digital vs Traditional Marketing
In 2024, businesses on average allocate 53.4% of their marketing spend to digital channels, with the remaining 46.6% supporting traditional avenues like print, TV, and radio.
For most small businesses, we recommend 70-80% digital. Here's why:
- Better tracking and ROI measurement
- Lower cost per lead
- Ability to target specific neighborhoods and demographics
- Easy to scale up or down based on results
Budget by Business Stage
Startup/Launch Phase
Spend: 12-20% of projected revenue
Focus: Brand awareness, website, initial lead generation
Growth Phase
Spend: 8-12% of revenue
Focus: Scaling what works, expanding reach, customer acquisition
Established/Maintenance Phase
Spend: 5-8% of revenue
Focus: Customer retention, referrals, protecting market share
Tracking Your ROI
The only way to know if your budget is working is to track results. At minimum, measure:
- Cost per lead: Total marketing spend ÷ number of leads
- Cost per acquisition: Total spend ÷ number of new customers
- Marketing ROI: (Revenue from marketing - marketing cost) ÷ marketing cost × 100
Industry benchmarks show that 40% of local SEO campaigns deliver a return of 500% or higher. If you're not seeing at least a 2-3x return, something needs to change.
2025 Budget Trends
Looking ahead, here's what the data shows:
- 49% of small businesses plan to increase marketing budgets in 2025
- 70% of SMBs plan to increase digital marketing spending specifically
- Marketing investment is expected to climb to 8.6% over the next 12 months
- AI and automation tools are becoming a larger portion of marketing tech spend
The businesses that invest now will have a significant advantage over those that continue to underspend.
Ready to create a marketing budget that actually drives growth? Let's build a plan together.

Elevated AI Consulting
Sam Irizarry is the founder of Elevated AI Consulting, helping businesses grow through strategic marketing and AI-powered solutions. With 12+ years of experience, Sam specializes in local SEO, web design, AI integration, and marketing strategy.
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