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Amazon Advertising Metrics: ACoS vs TACoS Explained

Introduction

Most Amazon sellers know their ACoS number. But ask them about TACoS and you’ll often get a blank stare or worse, a confident but wrong answer.

That’s a problem. Relying on ACoS alone to measure your Amazon advertising performance is like judging a business by revenue while ignoring profit. It tells you part of the story, never the whole picture.

In this guide, eComManagers breaks down both metrics clearly, what they mean, how to calculate them, when to use each one, and how to use them together to make smarter advertising decisions in 2026.

What Is ACoS on Amazon?

ACoS Definition and Formula

ACoS stands for Advertising Cost of Sales. It is the most commonly used Amazon PPC metric and measures how much you spend on ads relative to the revenue those ads directly generate.

Formula: ACoS = (Ad Spend ÷ Ad Revenue) × 100

If you spent $200 on ads and those ads generated $1,000 in sales, your ACoS is 20%.

ACoS is a direct measure of paid advertising efficiency. A lower ACoS means your ads are more efficient, you’re spending less to generate each dollar of ad-driven revenue. A higher ACoS means your ads cost more relative to what they bring in.

What Is a Good ACoS?

There is no universal answer because it depends entirely on your product margins. The key benchmark is your break-even ACoS, the point at which your advertising spend equals your profit margin.

For example, if your profit margin after all costs (product, shipping, Amazon fees) is 30%, your break-even ACoS is 30%. Anything below that means your ads are profitable. Anything above means you’re losing money on every ad-driven sale.

Experienced sellers typically target an ACoS of 15–25% on established products, though new product launches often run higher ACoS intentionally to build ranking and sales velocity.

What Is TACoS on Amazon

TACoS Definition and Formula

TACoS stands for Total Advertising Cost of Sales. Unlike ACoS, which only measures ad-generated revenue, TACoS measures your ad spend against your total revenue both organic and paid.

Formula:  TACoS = (Ad Spend ÷ Total Revenue) × 100

Using the same example: if you spent $200 on ads and your total revenue (organic + paid) was $4,000, your TACoS is 5%.

This single difference in the denominator makes TACoS a fundamentally different and in most cases, more useful metric for evaluating your overall business health on Amazon.

ACoS vs TACoS: Side-by-Side Comparison

METRIC FORMULA WHAT IT SHOWS THE RISK
ACoS Ad Spend ÷ Ad Revenue Paid performance only ACoS can improve while organic rank collapses
TACoS Ad Spend ÷ Total Revenue Full business health Exposes when PPC masks organic deterioration

ACoS vs TACoS: Why the Difference Matters

Here is the insight that changes how most sellers think about their advertising:

ACoS tells you how efficient your ads are. TACoS tells you how healthy your business is.

Scenario A

Your ACoS is 35%, which looks high and potentially unprofitable. But your TACoS is 8% because your organic sales are strong and growing. In this case, your ads are working, they are building ranking and driving organic velocity. The business is healthy.

Scenario B

Your ACoS is 18%, which looks great. But your TACoS is also 17% because almost all your sales come from paid ads with very little organic traffic. If you pause your ads, your revenue disappears. This is a fragile, high-risk position.

TACoS reveals organic dependency in a way that ACoS simply cannot. In 2026, with Amazon’s advertising costs rising across most categories, reducing organic dependency is one of the most important goals any serious seller should have.

To see how eComManagers approaches Amazon PPC management with a TACoS-first framework, explore our full service breakdown.

How ACoS and TACoS Move Together

Understanding the relationship between ACoS and TACoS over time tells a clear story about whether your Amazon strategy is working.

Our Amazon PPC case study on reducing ACoS by 50% in 3 months shows exactly how these metrics shifted as we optimized a real seller’s account worth reading if you want to see this in practice.

TACoS Declining, ACoS Stable or Slightly Rising

This is a positive signal. Organic sales are growing faster than ad spend. Keyword rankings are improving and your product is gaining traction beyond paid traffic.

TACoS and ACoS Are Close Together

Most revenue is coming from ads organic presence is weak. This is normal for new product launches but should not persist long term.

Both ACoS and TACoS Rising Together

This is a warning sign. Advertising is becoming less efficient and organic growth is not compensating. Common causes include bids that are too high, a listing conversion rate that has dropped, or a competitor taking your organic traffic.

How to Use ACoS and TACoS Together

The most effective approach is to use both metrics simultaneously but for different purposes.

Use ACoS for Campaign-Level Decisions

When optimizing individual campaigns, ad groups, or keywords, ACoS is the right metric. It tells you whether a specific keyword or campaign is generating returns above or below your break-even threshold. Bid up on keywords where ACoS is well below break-even. Reduce bids or pause keywords where ACoS is consistently above it.

If you want a structured approach to this, read our complete guide to Amazon PPC management for a step-by-step optimization framework.

Use TACoS for Business-Level Decisions

When evaluating whether your overall advertising investment is healthy, whether to increase or decrease total ad budget, or whether your organic growth strategy is working TACoS is the metric to watch. Track it weekly and monthly to see the trend over time.

Practical Targets for Both Metrics

Established Products

New Product Launches

To see what this looks like in practice, our Amazon PPC case studies show real results across product categories.

Other Amazon Advertising Metrics You Should Track

While ACoS and TACoS are the most important metrics for profitability analysis, they work best alongside a few other key numbers.

Understanding these metrics together is what separates sellers who manage their Amazon account strategically from those who optimize in the dark.

ROAS (Return on Ad Spend)

ROAS is the inverse of ACoS expressed as a multiplier. ROAS = Revenue ÷ Ad Spend. An ACoS of 20% equals a ROAS of 5x. Some sellers prefer ROAS because it frames performance as a multiplier rather than a percentage cost.

CTR (Click-Through Rate)

CTR measures how often people who see your ad actually click on it. A low CTR usually means your main image or title is not compelling enough for the search term you’re targeting. Industry average CTR on Amazon is around 0.4–0.5%, anything above 0.5% is generally strong.

CVR (Conversion Rate)

CVR measures how many clicks result in a purchase. This is where listing quality matters most. If your CTR is strong but CVR is low, your listing images, bullet points, price, or reviews are failing to convert interested shoppers. Average Amazon conversion rates sit between 10–15% for established products.

Impression Share

Impression Share tells you how visible your ads are relative to total available impressions for a keyword. A low impression share despite competitive bids usually indicates a quality score or relevance issue.

Getting Your Amazon Advertising Metrics Right

Understanding ACoS and TACoS is the starting point, but putting them to work consistently requires a structured approach to campaign management, bid optimization, and keyword strategy.

Many sellers know their numbers but still struggle to move them in the right direction. The optimization process is time-consuming, technical, and constantly changing as Amazon updates its advertising platform.

If you want data-driven keyword targeting to improve both ACoS and TACoS simultaneously, explore our guide on Amazon keyword research and smart targeting.

eComManagers Serves US Amazon Sellers

Whether you’re an established brand or a growing seller in the US market, our team is built to help you scale profitably. We work with Amazon sellers across the United States through our dedicated Amazon Services USA program, offering full PPC management, listing optimization, and account growth support.

If your ACoS is too high, your TACoS is not improving, or you simply aren’t sure whether your advertising budget is working as hard as it should be; we can help.

Conclusion

Most Amazon sellers optimize ACoS and never see the full picture. TACoS is what separates sellers who are truly profitable from those who are just buying revenue. Track both metrics consistently ACoS for campaign-level decisions, TACoS for overall business health. When TACoS trends down while revenue grows, your Amazon strategy is working. At eComManagers, every account is managed with this exact data-driven approach. Ready to scale profitably? Explore our Amazon PPC Management Services today.

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