Two vendedores sell the same product at the same price with the same ACOS. One is building a profitable business. The other is bleeding money. The difference? Their TACoS. If you manage your Amazon advertising by ACOS alone, you are looking at half the picture.
The Definitions
ACOS: Advertising Cost of Sale
ACOS = Ad Spend / Ad Revenue x 100
ACOS measures the efficiency of your advertising in isolation. It answers: "For every dollar of receita generated by ads, how much did I spend on ads?"
Example: You spend $500 on PPC this month. Those ads directly generate $2,000 in attributed sales. ACOS = $500 / $2,000 = 25%.
An ACOS of 25% means you spend $0.25 in advertising for every $1.00 of ad-attributed receita. Whether that is profitable depends entirely on your margins -- a topic covered in detail in our FBA fee guide.
TACoS: Total Advertising Cost of Sale
TACoS = Ad Spend / Total Revenue x 100
TACoS measures advertising spend against ALL receita -- including organic sales that were not directly attributed to an ad click. It answers: "What percentage of my total receita goes to advertising?"
Example: Same $500 ad spend. But your total receita (organic + ad-attributed) is $8,000. TACoS = $500 / $8,000 = 6.25%.
TACoS tells a fundamentally different story. While ACOS says you are spending 25 cents per ad dollar, TACoS says you are spending only 6.25 cents per total receita dollar. The difference is your organic sales -- the $6,000 in receita that came without direct ad spend.
Why the Distinction Matters
Consider two vendedores in the same niche:
| Metric | Seller A | Seller B |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly Ad Spend | $2,000 | $2,000 |
| Ad-Attributed Revenue | $6,667 | $6,667 |
| ACOS | 30% | 30% |
| Total Revenue | $10,000 | $25,000 |
| TACoS | 20% | 8% |
| Organic Revenue | $3,333 (33%) | $18,333 (73%) |
Both vendedores have identical ACOS. But Seller A depends on advertising for 67% of receita, while Seller B generates 73% organically. Seller B has built real organic demand. Seller A is buying almost all of their sales.
If both vendedores turned off PPC tomorrow, Seller B would retain most of their business. Seller A would lose two-thirds of receita. Same ACOS, entirely different business health.
What ACOS Tells You (and When to Focus on It)
ACOS is the right metric when you are optimizing campaign-level performance:
- Keyword-level decisions. Which keywords are converting efficiently? Kill keywords with ACOS above your breakeven threshold. Scale keywords with ACOS below it.
- Campaign structure. Are your Sponsored Products campaigns outperforming Sponsored Brands? ACOS comparison tells you.
- Bid optimization. When adjusting bids on specific search terms, ACOS is your primary efficiency gauge.
- New product launches. During the launch phase (months 1-3), ACOS is expected to be high (40-80%) as you build visibility. Tracking ACOS decline over time tells you if your launch strategy is working.
ACOS Breakeven Calculation
Your breakeven ACOS is the maximum ACOS at which advertising is still profitable on a per-unit basis:
Breakeven ACOS = (Selling Price - COGS - FBA Fees - Referral Fee) / Selling Price x 100
For a $24.99 product with $5.50 COGS, $4.32 FBA fee, and $3.75 referral fee:
Breakeven ACOS = ($24.99 - $5.50 - $4.32 - $3.75) / $24.99 = $11.42 / $24.99 = 45.7%
Any campaign running below 45.7% ACOS is contributing to profit. Above that, you are paying to lose money on each ad-attributed sale. No entanto, this does not account for the organic "halo effect" of advertising -- which is where TACoS comes in.
What TACoS Tells You (and When to Focus on It)
TACoS is the right metric for business-level health assessment:
- Advertising dependency. A rising TACoS means your business is becoming more dependent on paid advertising. A declining TACoS (with stable or growing receita) means organic demand is strengthening.
- Brand building progress. As your brand matures, TACoS should decrease because repeat clientes, brand searches, and organic ranking reduce your reliance on paid acquisition.
- Profitability trajectory. TACoS directly feeds into your overall profitability model. It represents the true advertising cost per receita dollar when calculating total margins.
- Portfolio management. Comparing TACoS across products reveals which products have strong organic demand (low TACoS) and which are ad-dependent (high TACoS).
TACoS Target Ranges
| TACoS Range | Phase | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| 3-7% | Mature product | Strong organic presence. Advertising is supplementary, not foundational. Healthy business. |
| 8-12% | Growing product | Building organic rank. Ad spend is driving discovery. Normal for products 6-18 months old. |
| 13-18% | Early stage / competitive | Heavy ad reliance. Either a new launch or a crowded niche requiring ongoing ad investment. |
| 19-25% | Concerning | Revenue is heavily ad-dependent. Organic rank may be weak. Evaluate whether the product can sustain profitability. |
| 25%+ | Red flag | Likely unprofitable unless margins are exceptionally high. Buying receita, not building a business. |
The TACoS Trajectory: The Most Important Trend
More important than any single TACoS snapshot is the trend over time. Here is what different trajectories mean:
Declining TACoS + Growing Revenue = Ideal. Your organic sales are growing faster than your ad spend. Each dollar of advertising is generating more total value as organic rank improves. This is the hallmark of a successful product launch.
Stable TACoS + Growing Revenue = Good. You are scaling proportionally. Ad spend is growing but so is organic. The business is healthy but has not yet reached the point where organic dominates.
Rising TACoS + Stable Revenue = Warning. You are spending more on ads to maintain the same receita. Competition may be increasing, organic rank may be slipping, or your conversion rate may be dropping. Investigate immediately.
Rising TACoS + Declining Revenue = Crisis. Both metrics moving in the wrong direction. The product may be losing relevance, facing new concorrência, or experiencing listing issues. Consider whether to invest in recovery or cut losses.
PPC Analysis in Every RIDGE Report
RIDGE analyzes competitive PPC landscapes, estimates target ACOS and TACoS for your product category, and incorporates advertising costs into Monte Carlo profitability simulations.
Solicite Sua AnálisePractical Scenarios
Scenario 1: Launch Phase (Months 1-3)
You launch a new product. ACOS is 55%, well above your 45% breakeven. TACoS is 42% because almost all sales come from ads. Should you panic?
No. During launch, you are buying visibility. The goal is not immediate profitability -- it is establishing search rank, accumulating reviews, and building the organic foundation. The key metric to watch is TACoS trajectory: is it declining week over week? If TACoS drops from 42% in month 1 to 28% in month 2 to 18% in month 3, your organic sales are growing and the launch is on track.
Budget for launch-phase losses in your cashflow forecast. Typical launch PPC investment runs $1,500-$5,000 over the first 90 days, with the expectation of recovering through improved organic sales in months 4-12.
Scenario 2: Mature Product Optimization
Your product has been live for 14 months. ACOS is 22% (well below breakeven). TACoS is 9%. Revenue is stable at $12,000/month. Should you increase ad spend?
Maybe. Test incrementally. Increase budget by 20% and monitor TACoS over 2-3 weeks. If TACoS stays at 9-10% while receita grows to $14,000, the incremental ad spend is generating proportional returns. If TACoS jumps to 14% with minimal receita increase, you are hitting diminishing returns.
Scenario 3: Competitor Entry
A new competitor launches with aggressive PPC, pushing your CPC up 40%. Your ACOS jumps from 22% to 35%. TACoS moves from 9% to 14%. Revenue drops 15%.
This is when TACoS matters most. The ACOS spike alone might cause you to slash ad spend. But if you reduce ads, you lose rank position, which further reduces organic sales, which further increases TACoS. A defensive PPC strategy -- maintaining presence on core keywords even at higher ACOS -- often costs less than the organic rank recovery after retreating.
ACOS and TACoS in Your Profitability Model
When building a sensitivity analysis for an Amazon product, TACoS is the more useful input because it represents the true advertising burden on total receita. ACOS is a campaign management tool; TACoS is a business planning metric.
In your Monte Carlo simulation, model TACoS as a variable that decreases over time (reflecting organic growth) but with uncertainty around the rate of decrease. A typical distribution might be:
- Month 1-3: TACoS 25-40% (launch)
- Month 4-6: TACoS 12-20% (growth)
- Month 7-12: TACoS 6-12% (maturation)
- Ongoing: TACoS 4-10% (steady state)
These ranges become inputs to the simulation, replacing the dangerous assumption of a single fixed PPC cost.
The Bottom Line
ACOS and TACoS are complementary metrics, not alternatives. Use ACOS to optimize individual campaigns and keywords. Use TACoS to assess whether your business is building sustainable organic demand or just buying temporary receita. The healthiest Amazon businesses have both: efficient campaigns (low ACOS) driving growth that reduces overall advertising dependency (declining TACoS).
If you only track one, track TACoS. It tells you whether your advertising investment is building an asset (organic rank and brand recognition) or just renting traffic. One creates long-term value. The other stops the moment you stop paying.