Four Markets. 472 Leads. One Agency. Philadelphia at $26.92, Charlotte at $48, Raleigh at $49.

Home accessibility equipment. Charlotte, Raleigh, Philadelphia, Milwaukee. 472 qualified leads. One agency managing all four simultaneously.

~$1,180,000
Estimated Revenue Across 4 Markets
$18,714
Combined Spend
472
New Customer Leads
$39.65
Blended Cost Per Lead
$26.92
Philadelphia CPA
$1.18M+
Est. Revenue Generated

All Four Markets. One Account.


$39.65 blended across four markets. Each one efficient. Each one different.
Philadelphia is the oldest campaign. Multiple quarters of data have brought it to $26.92 per lead — the most mature result in the account. Charlotte, Raleigh, and Milwaukee are earlier in that same trajectory.
Every market moves in the same direction over time: more conversion data, more refined exclusions, lower CPA. Philadelphia shows where the others are heading.

How Four Simultaneous Markets Actually Work


Each market runs as its own campaign with its own geographic targeting, its own bid strategy, and its own competitor exclusion list.
What’s shared across all four is the audience classification logic: how to separate a new-installation buyer from a DIY kit buyer, a brand-loyal user from an open comparison shopper, a used equipment searcher from someone ready for professional installation.

The Audience Classification That Makes It Work


Home accessibility is a high-intent vertical with a complex search landscape. The same vocabulary — stairlift, wheelchair ramp, accessibility equipment — attracts four completely different buyer types.
New installation buyers are the target. Used equipment seekers are not — different market entirely.
DIY kit buyers are not — they’re buying to self-install, not hire a dealer. Brand-loyal users searching a brand the dealer doesn’t carry are not — they’ve already made their choice.
Each category is classified and managed separately in every market. The classification is reviewed and updated every quarter as search patterns evolve.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Philadelphia’s $26.92 CPA is the model. It reflects what happens when multiple quarters of conversion data tell Smart Bidding exactly which searches produce real stairlift and mobility equipment buyers — at the lowest possible cost. Every market gets there. Philadelphia just got there first.

Five Questions Accessibility Equipment Dealers Actually Search For

What is a good cost per lead for a stairlift or accessibility equipment dealer on Google Ads?

The 2026 industry average for home accessibility equipment is $35-75 per lead. At $2,500 average installation, even $75 per lead represents a 33x return on that lead. This four-market account achieved $39.65 blended and $26.92 in the most mature market.
The 2026 fitness industry average is $15-45 per new member. A boutique studio with precise local targeting and chain gym exclusions can achieve $4-10. This Essex County studio achieved $1.48 in its first two months. See the full fitness Google Ads benchmarks 2026 for comparison.

Vocabulary segmentation. Used equipment searches include Craigslist stairlift, secondhand wheelchair ramp, used grab bar — explicit secondhand language. New installation searches include stairlift installation, accessibility equipment dealer, accessibility contractor near me. The secondhand vocabulary is excluded at the account level across all markets.

Yes for brands the dealer carries — those users are high-intent buyers already familiar with the product. No for brands the dealer doesn’t carry — those users are brand-loyal to a specific manufacturer and won’t switch dealers. The classification is reviewed quarterly as the dealer’s product line evolves.

Smart Bidding accumulates conversion data and uses it to find the highest-converting searches at the lowest cost. A new market has no history. An established market like Philadelphia has multiple quarters of data telling the algorithm exactly who buys stairlifts in that geography. how Google Ads campaigns compound over time explains the full mechanism.

Separate campaigns with geographic restrictions. Charlotte’s campaign only reaches Charlotte-area searchers. Philadelphia’s campaign only reaches Philadelphia-area searchers. There’s no overlap in the auction. The markets don’t compete — they run in parallel, each optimizing independently, each feeding into the blended performance picture.

Multi-market Google Ads management for accessibility equipment dealers nationwide.
A free audit shows you what each of your markets is returning — and what Philadelphia’s $26.92 looks like in yours.

growmarketingco.com/services/free-google-ads-audit

Ready to Get Better Results?

Let’s chat about how we can improve your performance.

View More Case Studies

Scroll to Top