You opened Meta Ads Manager, saw a 6x ROAS, and felt great. Then you checked your bank account and it told a different story. That gap between the dashboard and the deposit is where most ad budgets quietly bleed. ROAS is the most trusted number in paid ads and also the most misleading. Here is why, and the metrics that actually protect your margin.
What ROAS actually measures
Return on ad spend is simple. It is the revenue attributed to your ads divided by what you paid for those ads.
ROAS = revenue from ads / ad spend
Spend 10,000 dollars, get 40,000 dollars in attributed sales, and your ROAS is 4. Clean, fast, and available in every platform dashboard. That convenience is exactly the problem. ROAS is a top line ratio, and top line ratios hide everything that matters below them.
The three blind spots that make ROAS lie
ROAS breaks in three predictable ways. If you know them, you stop trusting the number blindly.
- It ignores your margin. ROAS counts revenue, not profit. A 4x ROAS on a product with a 20 percent gross margin is a losing campaign, because you spent a dollar to earn eighty cents of gross profit. The dashboard calls that a win. Your P and L calls it a leak.
- Platforms grade their own homework. Meta, Google and TikTok each report the revenue they claim credit for. They all take credit for the same conversions. Add up the platform ROAS numbers and the total revenue often exceeds what you actually banked. This is attribution inflation, and it is baked into self reported ROAS.
- It hides refunds, shipping and fees. Attributed revenue is gross. It does not subtract returns, cost of goods, shipping, discounts or payment processing. Two campaigns with identical ROAS can have wildly different real outcomes once those costs land.
So a strong platform ROAS is not proof of profit. It is a claim, made by the party you are paying, measured before your real costs.
Break-even ROAS: the floor you cannot ignore
Before you judge any campaign, you need to know the ROAS at which you make exactly zero profit. That is your break-even ROAS, and it comes straight from your margin.
Break-even ROAS = 1 / gross profit margin
If your gross profit margin is 25 percent, your break-even ROAS is 1 divided by 0.25, which is 4. Every sale below a 4x ROAS loses money before you have paid a single overhead cost. If your margin is 50 percent, break-even drops to 2. This one number turns ROAS from a vanity metric into a pass or fail line. Never celebrate a ROAS until you know where your floor sits.
Blended ROAS: stop letting platforms double count
To escape attribution inflation, zoom out. Blended ROAS ignores what each platform claims and looks at the whole business.
Blended ROAS = total revenue / total ad spend
Every channel, every dollar, one honest ratio. It cannot be gamed by overlapping attribution because it does not care which platform gets credit. When your platform ROAS looks great but blended ROAS is flat, you have found the inflation. Blended ROAS is the number we watch first for most of our clients at Litmus Universe, because it is the one the platforms cannot flatter.
MER: the same idea, applied to your P and L
Marketing efficiency ratio takes blended thinking and widens it to all marketing spend, not just paid media.
MER = total revenue / total marketing spend
MER answers the question a founder actually asks. For every dollar we put into marketing, how many dollars of revenue came back across the entire business. It smooths out channel level noise and tracks with reality on your bank statement. Deloitte and HubSpot research through 2025 both point the same way. The teams with the highest returns lean on blended and MER style metrics rather than trusting channel level attribution as their main signal.
POAS: the metric that survives your accountant
Blended ROAS and MER fix attribution. They still measure revenue, not profit. To close the loop completely you need profit on ad spend.
POAS = gross profit from ads / ad spend
Gross profit here means attributed revenue minus cost of goods, shipping, returns, discounts and payment fees. The break-even point for POAS is not 4 or 2. It is always 1. A POAS of 1 means your ad dollar earned exactly one dollar of gross profit. Below 1 you lose money no matter how pretty the ROAS looks. Above 1 you are genuinely profitable. When you optimize campaigns toward POAS, the algorithm stops chasing cheap, high volume, low margin sales and starts chasing the customers who actually pay your rent.
When to use each metric
- Break-even ROAS. Set it once from your margin. Use it as the pass or fail line for every campaign.
- Platform ROAS. Use it for fast, tactical decisions inside one channel, never as proof of total profit.
- Blended ROAS. Use it to catch attribution inflation and judge whether paid media is really growing the business.
- MER. Use it as the founder level health check across all marketing.
- POAS. Use it as the truth metric when margins vary across products and profit is the real goal.
None of these replace ROAS entirely. They surround it, so a single flattering ratio can no longer run your budget. That is the whole game. Measure profit, not applause.
Getting this right is less about a fancier dashboard and more about wiring your real costs into the numbers you optimize toward. That is the work we do every day at Litmus Universe, turning noisy platform metrics into a clear line between spend and profit. If your ROAS looks great but the growth is not showing up where it counts, let us help you find out why.
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