Google Ads vs Local Services Ads for Lawyers

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Channel allocation guide · 2026

When your firm should weight LSAs vs Google Ads, by practice type and metro tier, using case acquisition cost math. Not generic “use both” advice.

Most “LSA vs Google Ads” guides give you a definitions list and a generic “use both” conclusion. That doesn’t help anyone allocate budget.

This page shows how real law firms split spend by practice type, city tier, and intake capacity. Cost per signed case is the metric that decides allocation, not cost per click. FL Bar Rule 4-7.13 / 4-7.14 referenced where it applies. Out of state firms map to their own state bar rules.

Jorge Argota, legal marketing consultant in Miami
Written by
Legal marketing consultant
Miami, FL

10 years working alongside Percy Martinez P.A. on marketing, intake, and client acquisition. Built and managed paid campaigns for 10+ Florida firms since 2016.

Specializes in
Google Ads Local Services Ads Legal SEO Intake systems FL Bar compliance

01 · Fast answer: who should use what

Decision matrix

Most law firms should run both the two channels. The right split depends on 3 inputs: practice type urgency, city tier, and intake capacity. The matrix below gives you a starting allocation in 30 seconds.

Firm profile
Start here
Why
Urgent consumer practice in top-tier metro
60/40 weighted to LSAs over search ads. PI / criminal / DUI / family law in NYC, LA, Miami, Chicago, Houston.
LSAs capture high urgency calls cheaper than Google Ads at this competition level. Ads layer in for higher value case types.
High value or narrow case type
30/70 weighted to LSAs over search ads. Mass tort, med mal, catastrophic injury, complex business litigation, high net worth divorce.
PPC with tight keyword themes filters for case fit better than LSA’s broad practice type buckets.
Tier 2 / Tier 3 market
50/50 starting. Tampa, Orlando, Charlotte, Denver. LSA volume thinner; Ads carry more weight.
LSA impression share drops outside Tier 1. Paid search picks up overflow and lets you expand geo.
Intake capacity limited
20/80 pay-per-lead-heavy versus search ads. Solo or 2 attorney firm with no dedicated intake.
LSAs flood you with leads if intake can’t handle them. Google Ads with tight match types throttles volume.
Non urgent case category
0/100 to start, layer LSAs later. Estate planning, business law, tax, immigration (non urgent).
Searchers are researching, not ready to call. PPC with content rich landing pages outperforms LSAs here.

After 90 days of data, reallocate budget toward whichever channel produced the lower case acquisition cost (CPSC), not the lower lead cost.

02 · What each channel actually is

Definitions
Local Services Ads

Google Screened · pay per qualified lead

Google Screened Local Services Ads card example showing law firm name, rating, Google Screened badge, and click to call button as it appears at the top of a Google search result page
What an LSA card looks like on a real SERP. Google Screened badge, firm name, rating, click to call.
  • Charges per lead (call or message), not per click
  • Top of page placement above Google Ads
  • Card format with firm name, rating, click to call
  • Requires bar verification + Google background check
  • Ranking driven by reviews, response time, proximity, bid
  • Available for personal injury, criminal, family, immigration, estate, business; varies by market
  • Google credits leads that don’t match case category or geo
Google Ads (Search)

Pay per click · full keyword flexibility

Google Ads search text ad example showing the Sponsored label, headline, URL, description, and sitelinks as they appear below the Local Services Ads section on a Google search result page
What a Google Ads text ad looks like. “Sponsored” label, headline, description, no card format, no rating.
  • Charges per click whether the user converts or not
  • Shows below LSA section, above Map Pack
  • Text format: headline + description + landing page link
  • No bar verification required to launch
  • Ranking driven by bid, quality score, ad relevance
  • Works across every case category at any volume
  • You absorb every irrelevant click; negatives required
Factor Google Ads (Search PPC) Local Services Ads (Google Screened)
Payment model Pay per click Pay per qualified lead
Placement Below LSAs, above organic Top of page, above everything
Flexibility Full flexibility on keywords, bids, ad copy, landing page Limited; Google formatted card and profile
Verification None required to launch Bar license, insurance, background check
Targeting Keywords, match types, negatives, geo, schedule Service areas, practice categories, proximity, budget
Trust signal None native; built via landing page Google Screened badge + review stars
Scalability Nearly unlimited with budget and geo expansion Volume capped by local search demand and Google Screened inventory

03 · PPC vs LSA: how each channel performs in practice

Lead economics

The structural difference between the two channels is when payment happens.

Local Services Ads
You pay after a qualified call
Google Screened filters first. LSA spend is closer to a guaranteed lead cost.
Google Ads (Search)
You pay on every click
Lead quality is your job. Negative keywords, match types, and landing pages do the filtering.

Different searches produce different winners.

When LSAs win
Urgent local searches
  • car accident lawyer near me
  • DUI lawyer Tampa
  • criminal defense attorney now
The searcher is ready to hire. Pre call screening removes most of the noise.
When Google Ads wins
Specialized or high value searches
  • spinal cord injury attorney
  • talcum powder lawsuit
  • commercial litigation lawyer
The searcher needs detail first. A tight keyword to landing page chain wins.

Most firms benefit from running both, then letting cost per signed case determine the split.

“The right question is not LSA or Google Ads. It is which channel signs more cases for your firm in your city. Run both, measure both, reallocate every 90 days.”
Jorge Argota · April 2026

04 · Practice area allocation matrix

Channel mix by practice

Starting allocation by legal vertical in a Tier 1 metro. Adjust based on intake capacity and 90 day signed case data.

Practice area Starting mix (LSAs · Google Ads) Why this split
Personal Injury (general)
60% LSA
40% Ads
LSAs capture urgent local calls; Ads target higher value case types and non LSA geos.
Mass Tort / Med Mal
25%
75% Ads
Narrow targeting beats broad LSA buckets. Ads with tight keyword themes filter for case fit.
Criminal Defense / DUI
65% LSA
35% Ads
Urgent local intent dominates. Google Screened ads first; Ads for premium terms (“federal”, “no jail”).
Family Law (general)
55% LSA
45% Ads
LSAs for raw lead volume. Ads for high net worth, contested, complex custody.
Immigration
35%
65% Ads
Mostly research intent. Ads with content rich landing pages outperform card-format ad.
Estate Planning
20%
80% Ads
Searchers are researching, not ready to call. Ads with educational content win.
Business Litigation
15%
85% Ads
B2B searcher behavior. Long research cycles. LSA card format underperforms here.

Source: Argota observation across client accounts and public benchmarks, 2024 to 2026. Allocations are starting points; reallocate based on signed case data after 90 days.

05 · City tiers change everything

Market competition

A 60/40 allocation that works in Tampa fails in NYC. LSA competition, Google Ads CPCs, and impression share all shift by tier. Use the framework below to set realistic budget expectations.

Tier 1 metros
NYC, LA, Chicago, Miami, Houston, Dallas, Atlanta, Phoenix
The market

The most competitive markets in the country. Ranking in either channel requires real budget, fast intake response, and consistent review velocity.

LSA cost per lead
$200 to $400+
Google Ads CPC
$200 to $800
By practice

PI leans LSA (urgent, intake-driven). Criminal splits roughly even. Family law leans LSA for divorce volume, Google Ads for high net worth.

The play: Run both. Let signed case data set the split.
Tier 2 cities
Tampa, Orlando, Charlotte, Denver, Austin, Nashville
The market

Less crowded auctions, faster path to top placement. Top of LSAs is reachable in months, not years.

LSA cost per lead
$80 to $250
Google Ads CPC
$60 to $250
By practice

PI often outperforms Tier 1 here because review velocity converts faster in a less saturated field. Criminal stays urgent. Family law tilts toward LSAs as lead cost drops.

The play: Start at 50/50. LSAs frequently win the cost per case math when intake is run well.
Tier 3 markets
Suburban areas, small cities, populations under 200,000
The market

The constraint is search volume, not competition. LSA inventory is often too thin to absorb a real budget. Geographic expansion to nearby markets is usually viable.

LSA cost per lead
Limited inventory
Google Ads CPC
$20 to $100
By practice

PI runs Google Ads with expanded geography. Criminal stays local but LSA volume is thin. Family law and estate planning often run Google Ads only.

The play: Google Ads primary. Add LSAs only if your market shows 150+ relevant searches per month.
Cross vertical patterns

the two channels work the same way across every vertical Google supports: emergency plumbing, HVAC, roofing, garage door repair, real estate. The lessons from those verticals map directly to legal practice. Your PI channel mix should look more like an emergency plumber’s mix. Your business litigation mix should look more like a B2B SaaS funnel.

Emergency plumbing
Like: Personal Injury or DUI

The searcher with a burst pipe is not researching plumbing companies; they need help in the next 30 minutes. Personal injury and DUI behave the same way. The intent is urgent, local, and ready to convert on the first phone call. LSAs win here because the card format with click to call matches what the searcher is trying to do. Google Ads runs alongside as a secondary channel.

HVAC install or roofing
Like: Medical Malpractice or Mass Tort

A new HVAC system or a full roof replacement is a $10,000 plus decision and the searcher is researching for weeks. Medical malpractice and mass tort follow the same pattern. The case is high value, the timeline is long, and the prospect needs detailed information before they will commit. Google Ads with tight keyword themes and content rich landing pages outperforms the LSA card format here.

Real estate or mortgage
Like: Estate Planning or Family Law

First time home buyers and refinance shoppers research for months before contacting anyone. Estate planning and uncontested divorce searchers behave identically. The decision is significant, the timeline is long, and the searcher needs to understand the process before they call. Google Ads paired with educational content converts these searchers; the LSA card format does not give them what they need to move forward.

B2B software or commercial services
Like: Business Litigation

A business buying enterprise software does not click “call now”; the decision involves multiple stakeholders, several rounds of evaluation, and a procurement process. Business litigation searchers behave the same way. Google Ads, organic search, and direct outreach do most of the work. LSAs run at minimal share because the card format does not match how these prospects actually evaluate counsel.

Pattern: LSAs win when intent is urgent and local. Google Ads win when targeting is narrow and case value is high. Same logic across legal, home services, and commercial verticals.

07 · Budget allocation, tracking, common traps

Strategy The metric that matters

The metric that determines profitability is cost per signed case, not cost per lead. Cost per lead is easy to pull from a dashboard and that is why most firms compare channels with it; the comparison is misleading. A $40 lead from Google Ads converting at 5 percent and a $200 LSA lead converting at 20 percent do not look similar on a CPL report, but they produce roughly the same cost per signed case. Channel decisions made on lead cost alone routinely defund the channel that is actually working.

What to track

Four numbers per channel. Ninety days of data is enough to see which channel is winning.

01
Cost per qualified lead
What each real call or form fill costs
02
Lead to signed case rate
Percent of leads that actually retain
03
Cost per signed case
The number that decides profitability
04
Average case value
What a signed case is worth on average

Move budget toward the winner. Restructure the loser or scale it back. Channel allocation is a math problem and emotional attachment to a particular tool is what causes most of the bad decisions in this category.

Four traps that cost firms real money
01
Killing LSAs at week 4 because cost per lead looks high. Cost per lead is the wrong signal at week 4; signed case data does not stabilize until week 8 to 12.
02
Running both channels through the same intake script. LSA callers have already been screened by Google, so the intake job is to close. Google Ads form fills are colder and need to be qualified before close. Same script across both channels means leads bleeding on each side.
03
Skipping offline conversion import on Google Ads. Without it, the bidding algorithm optimizes for cheap leads instead of leads that actually become signed cases.
04
Failing to dispute LSA leads outside your practice or geography. Google credits these back, but only when you flag them. Most firms do not, and they leave money on the table month after month.
The ceiling nobody mentions
Structural limit on LSAs

LSAs have a hard ceiling that most agencies will not mention. Local search demand for any specific case type in any specific city is finite. Once you have captured the bulk of that demand at a profitable cost per lead, additional budget produces nothing. The auction has nothing left to sell you.

Google Ads has no equivalent ceiling because you can always add keywords, expand geography, or layer in different match types. Firms that want sustained growth past whatever LSAs naturally cap at have to invest in Google Ads, organic search, and channels outside Google entirely. This is the structural reason mid sized firms eventually run heavier on Google Ads even when LSAs deliver a lower cost per signed case.

08 · Compliance and ethics across both channels

Bar rules

Bar advertising rules apply to LSAs, Google Ads, landing pages, and call recordings equally. The most common compliance failures across both channels: comparative superiority claims (best, top, leading), specialist or expert claims without certification, past results without disclaimers, and testimonials that violate state specific rules.

Florida specific. Three rules carry most of the weight. Rule 4-7.13(b)(3) prohibits comparative superiority claims like “best” or “top.” Rule 4-7.14(a)(4) restricts “specialist” and “expert” to attorneys with Florida Bar Board Certification, though the 2019 amendment relaxed enforcement; verify the current version before publishing. Past results in any creative trigger Rubenstein v. Florida Bar (2014) disclosure requirements. The Google Screened branding that LSAs apply to your profile is a Google designation, not a bar credential, and does not change any of the above obligations.

LSA call recordings are made by Google’s system; review your firm’s recording disclosure compliance for 2 party consent states (Florida is 2 party). Out of state firms map every section of this guide to their own state bar advertising rules before launching either channel.

LSA profile compliance checklist
  • No “best”, “top”, “leading” in profile description (FL Rule 4-7.13(b)(3))
  • No “specialist” or “expert” unless Florida Bar Board Certified (Rule 4-7.14(a)(4))
  • Review snippets aligned with state testimonial rules; some states require disclaimers on outcome-based reviews
  • Recording disclaimer ready for 2 party consent states; Google records LSA calls automatically
  • Past results disclaimers on any settlement amounts mentioned in profile (Rubenstein v. FL Bar 2014)

09 · Real Argota client work where this framework came from

Real clients

The allocation framework above isn’t theoretical. It’s pulled from 10 years working with Florida law firms across multiple matter types. Below: 4 active client engagements that informed the channel mix patterns on this page. Each links to a full case study with verifiable numbers.

Case 01 · Medical Malpractice · Miami

Percy Martinez, P.A.

10 year engagement · flagship case · multi market expansion

Started as a solo practice in Miami with a $500 budget. Now ranks across Miami, Orlando, Tampa, and Jacksonville. The longest active engagement informs how channel mix evolves as a firm scales geographically.

If you are a multi-market medical malpractice firm: your mix should look closer to this than the generic 60/40. Heavier on organic compounding, paid scaling with intake capacity.
483%
Traffic growth 2022 to 2026
287
Leads in 5 weeks (single campaign)
10 yr
Active engagement
Read full Percy Martinez case study
Case 02 · Birth Injury · Kendall, FL

Jorge L. Flores, P.A.

Medical malpractice subset · site migration · local Map Pack

Migrated from a FindLaw site (2003 era) to a site he actually owns. Took #1 Map Pack for “medical malpractice lawyers Kendall, FL” in 5 months. Demonstrates how channel allocation works for narrow geographic targeting in a competitive practice area.

If you are a single-market specialty firm: your mix should look closer to this. Google Screened weight heavy in your micro-market, Google Ads for high-value subset cases.
#1
Kendall Map Pack
4.9
Stars · 35 reviews
5 mo
To top rank
Read full Flores case study
Case 03 · Maritime / Federal · Miami

Miami Cruise Ship Lawyers

Federal jurisdiction practice · specialty positioning

First page ranking for “Miami cruise ship lawyers.” Maritime injury cases go to federal court in Miami regardless of where passengers got hurt; the positioning reflects the jurisdiction, not the geography. Shows how channel mix shifts for narrow specialty practices where LSAs don’t cleanly apply.

If you are a federal jurisdiction or specialty practice: your mix should look closer to this. Google Screened spend near zero, Google Ads + organic SEO carry the work, jurisdiction beats geography.
P1
First page core term
FL
Federal jurisdiction
Live
Active campaign
Read cruise ship case study
Case 04 · Insurance Disputes · Statewide FL

Property Claim Group

Multi peril rankings · seasonal compounding

Insurance disputes across Florida. Consistently ranks for hurricane damage, flood claims, and roof denial searches. Seasonal traffic patterns that compound through hurricane season inform how dayparting and budget pacing work alongside year round channel mix.

If you are a seasonal or event-driven practice: your mix should look closer to this. Search ads scale up during peak windows; LSAs run year-round at baseline; budget pacing matches the calendar.
Multi
Peril rankings
FL
Statewide coverage
Live
Active campaign
Read Property Claim case study
4 active engagements · 4 Florida cities · 0 direct competitors per market. One firm per practice area per metro. Full numbers, screenshots, and timelines on the results page.
See all results →

FAQ

Should my law firm use Google Ads or Local Services Ads?
Most law firms should run both. LSAs charge per qualified lead and capture high urgency local intent (car accident, DUI, divorce near me). Google Ads charge per click and let you target higher value or narrower case types where LSAs don’t reach. The right split depends on practice area, city tier, and intake capacity. Urgent consumer practices in Tier 1 metros usually start 60/40 LSAs to Google Ads. High value or narrow case types often start 30/70 LSAs to Google Ads.
What is the difference between Google Ads and Local Services Ads for law firms?
Google Ads (Search) charges per click and shows below the LSA section. You control keywords, ad copy, and landing page. Local Services Ads (LSAs, Google Screened) charge per qualified lead and show above Google Ads in a card format with the firm’s name, rating, and phone. LSAs require background checks and bar verification. Google Ads do not. LSAs prioritize review velocity, response time, and proximity. Google Ads prioritize bid, quality score, and ad relevance.
How much do Local Services Ads cost for lawyers?
Google Screened lead cost for lawyers ranges from $50 to $400+ depending on practice area and metro. Personal injury LSAs in Tier 1 metros routinely hit $200 to $400 per lead. Criminal defense and family law typically run $80 to $200. LSAs charge per qualified lead, not per click. Google credits leads that don’t match the practice area or geography you set. The actual cost per signed case is the metric that matters, not cost per lead in isolation.
Are Local Services Ads worth it for personal injury lawyers?
Yes, in most competitive markets. LSAs put PI firms above Google Ads with the Google Screened badge, click to call format, and review based ranking. Cost per signed case from LSAs is often lower than Google Ads for high urgency PI queries (car accident, slip and fall, motorcycle accident) because pre call screening filters out non viable searchers. The exception is high value PI niches (mass tort, medical malpractice, catastrophic injury) where Google Ads with tight keyword themes often produces better case quality.
How do you allocate budget between the two channels?
Start with practice area urgency and case value. Urgent consumer practices (PI, criminal, family) in Tier 1 metros typically start 60/40 LSAs to Google Ads. High value or specialty practices (medical malpractice, mass tort, complex business litigation) typically start 30/70 LSAs to Google Ads. Then tilt allocation based on cost per signed case after 90 days, not cost per lead. The channel that produces the lowest cost per signed case gets more budget, regardless of which channel produced more leads.
Do LSAs and Google Ads have to follow Bar advertising rules?
Yes. Every state’s bar advertising rules apply to Google Ads, LSAs, landing pages, and call recordings. The most common compliance issues across both channels: comparative superiority claims (best, top), specialist or expert claims without certification, past results without disclaimers, and testimonials that violate state specific rules. Florida attorneys: Rule 4-7.13 governs information about lawyer’s services; Rule 4-7.14(a)(4) governs specialty claims. LSAs add Google Screened branding which attorneys must manage alongside their professional obligations.
Can law firms run LSAs in non urgent practice types like estate planning or business law?
Google Screened is available for some non urgent practice types but produce less ROI than urgent consumer practices. Estate planning, business law, and tax law searchers are often researching rather than ready to call. PPC with longer keyword themes and content rich landing pages typically outperform LSAs for these practices. Start Google Ads first for non urgent case categories, then layer LSAs only after the search volume justifies it.
What metrics should I track to compare LSAs vs Google Ads?
Track 4 metrics per channel: cost per qualified lead (CPQL), lead to signed case conversion rate, cost per signed case (CPSC), and average case value. CPSC is the metric that determines profitability; CPL alone is misleading because LSAs and Google Ads have very different lead quality patterns. After 90 days of data per channel, the channel with the lowest CPSC gets more budget. Most firms find LSAs win for urgent consumer queries and Google Ads win for high value or narrow case types.
Channel allocation audit

Want me to score your LSA vs Google Ads mix against this framework?

I’ll audit both channels: cost per signed case by practice area, allocation gaps, intake capacity fit, and compliance review. You get a written audit with reallocation recommendations ranked by dollar impact.

What you get
  • Cost per signed case calculation per channel
  • Reallocation recommendation by practice area
  • Intake capacity fit analysis
  • FL Bar compliance review
  • 90 day reallocation roadmap
Source: Jorge Argota, 10 years in legal marketing, Miami. Cost ranges, allocation percentages, and case study results reflect observation across client accounts; your numbers will vary by practice area, market, and intake quality. Florida Bar Rule references current as of April 2026; verify against current rules before launching.