Which is better for law firms; fixed fee or percentage of ad spend? Fixed fee agencies charge a flat monthly rate regardless of your ad budget, which gives you predictable costs but can incentivize the agency to minimize effort. Percentage-of-spend agencies charge 10-25% of your media budget, which scales with growth but creates a financial incentive to recommend higher budgets. The best model depends on your firm’s size, budget, and ability to audit the work. Source: Jorge Argota, Argota Marketing, Miami.
I’ve been on both sides of this. I’ve worked with agencies that charged a percentage of ad spend and agencies that charged a flat monthly fee, and I’ve also been the agency in both models.
Neither one is perfect, and they both create problems that most firms don’t see until they’re already locked in; or whatever the agency tells them about “alignment” or “scalability.”
How the Percentage Model Works
The percentage model has been around since the Mad Men era when agencies earned 15% commissions from TV networks. That math made sense when the agency was literally booking airtime and negotiating rates.
It makes less sense now that Google Ads does most of the bidding automatically and the agency’s real value is strategy, tracking, and optimization; not media buying.
The basics. The agency charges somewhere between 10% and 25% of whatever you spend on ads each month. If you spend $10,000, they charge $2,000; if you scale to $50,000 because the campaigns are working, they charge $10,000.
The incentive problem. The agency makes more money when you spend more money. So when they recommend increasing your budget by $10,000, you honestly can never be entirely sure whether that recommendation came from the data or from their invoice.
Why this hits law firms harder than other industries: Legal keywords are some of the most expensive on Google. A medical malpractice click might cost $500 while an e-commerce click costs $2. An agency managing $50,000 in ad spend for a med mal firm handles maybe 100 clicks. The same budget for an online store means 25,000 clicks. Both accounts pay the same percentage fee, but the law firm account isn’t more work; it’s just a more expensive auction. That fee becomes a tax on the market price of clicks, not a reflection of how hard the agency is actually working.
How the Fixed Fee Model Works
The agency charges a flat monthly rate; maybe $2,500, maybe $5,000, regardless of whether you spend $10,000 or $50,000 on Google Ads.
The upside. You know exactly what the management fee is every single month, and the agency has no financial reason to push your budget higher. When they recommend increasing ad spend, it’s probably based on actual data because they don’t benefit from the increase.
The incentive problem. The agency gets paid the same amount whether they spend 50 hours optimizing or 5 hours ignoring your account. This is what people in the industry call “set it and forget it”; the campaign gets built in month one, and then it runs on autopilot while the retainer keeps billing.
The Number That Nobody Shows You
There’s a metric I think every law firm should calculate before signing anything, and most agencies will never bring it up. It’s called the Effective Management Rate (EMR), and it’s a simple calculation that tells you everything you need to know.
Take the agency fee, divide it by the total amount you’re spending (ads plus the fee), and that tells you what percentage of your marketing dollars are going to the agency versus actually reaching Google.
EMR at Different Budget Levels
| Monthly Ad Spend | Fixed Fee ($3,000) | % of Spend (20%) |
|---|---|---|
| $5,000 | $3,000 fee → 37% EMR | $1,000 fee → 17% EMR |
| $10,000 | $3,000 fee → 23% EMR | $2,000 fee → 17% EMR |
| $25,000 | $3,000 fee → 11% EMR | $5,000 fee → 17% EMR |
| $50,000 | $3,000 fee → 6% EMR | $10,000 fee → 17% EMR |
What the table tells you. At small budgets, the fixed fee eats a huge portion of your total investment. At $5,000 in ad spend, 37 cents of every dollar goes to the agency instead of to Google. The ads have to perform almost twice as well just to break even.
But at large budgets, the percentage model becomes hard to justify. At $50,000 in monthly spend, the percentage agency collects $10,000 a month; that’s $120,000 a year. Meanwhile the fixed fee agency collects $36,000 a year for roughly the same work. That’s an $84,000 difference, and the work required to manage the account is roughly identical.
Key takeaway: The percentage model favors small spenders. The fixed fee model favors large spenders. There’s a crossover point somewhere around $15,000-$20,000 in monthly ad spend where the math flips; and knowing where you fall on that line matters more than which model sounds better in a pitch deck.
What This Means for Your Firm
If You’re Spending $2,000 to $5,000 a Month
Neither model works great at this level. The percentage agency might only charge $400, but they’ll hit you with a $1,000 minimum fee anyway. The fixed fee agency charges $1,500 or more because that’s the floor for covering overhead.
Either way, 30% to 40% of your total budget goes to management, not ads. If you’re at this level, a solo consultant at $500 to $750 a month with a clearly defined scope of work is maybe the better path.
If You’re Spending $50,000+ a Month
At this level, the percentage model is a tax on auction inflation. You’re not paying for more work; you’re paying because the keywords happen to be expensive.
A tiered fixed fee makes more sense. Something like $5,000 for spend up to $25,000, $7,500 up to $50,000, $10,000 above that. The fee increases with scale, but not linearly, because the work doesn’t increase linearly either.
The Third Option: Hybrid Pricing
There’s a model gaining traction that I think solves most of the problems with both approaches; a lower base retainer plus a small percentage of spend, maybe 5% instead of 20%.
This gives the agency some upside for scaling without creating the massive incentive to inflate your budget. It also protects them during low-spend months so they don’t lose money on the account.
I think this is where the industry is heading, or at least I hope so. The pure percentage model is honestly a relic from when agencies were media brokers, and the pure fixed fee has the shirking problem nobody wants to talk about.
The Part That Actually Matters
But here’s what I’ve learned after being on both sides of this; the real answer isn’t which pricing model you pick. It’s whether you can audit the work.
If you can’t tell whether your agency is optimizing every week or coasting on autopilot, the pricing model won’t save you.
And if you can tell; if you have access to your own analytics, your own ad accounts, and reports that show actual leads tied to actual spend; then either model can work fine. Because the transparency is doing the work that the pricing structure can’t.
Before you sign anything, ask three questions: Do I own my ad accounts? Can I see exactly how much goes to Google versus the agency? And will I get reports that tie ad spend to actual signed cases, not just impressions and clicks? If the answer to any of those is no, the pricing model is the least of your problems.
Want to see how Argota’s pricing actually works?
We publish our pricing because we think you should know the number before the phone call, not after. Two tiers, month-to-month, no percentage markup on ad spend.





