Facebook Ads Insights Tool

Facebook Ads Cost Per Purchase Benchmarks for E-commerce in Canada

See how your purchase costs compare. Explore ecommerce conversion cost benchmarks by industry, region, and campaign type

Cost Per Purchase for E-commerce in Canada

October 2024 - October 2025

Insights

Detailed observation of presented data

Key takeaways

  • This analysis looks at cost per purchase trends for E-commerce in Canada compared to the global trend. The analysis is based on $3B worth of advertising data from our dataset, which provides strong directional benchmarks.
  • Overall level: The Canadian series is effectively in line with the global baseline, averaging 47.66 vs 47.82 globally (-0.35% below market).
  • Volatility: Canada shows higher month-to-month movement (median ±6.98%; average ±9.35%) than the global trend (median ±2.37%; average ±6.97%).
  • Range: Canada’s monthly median cost per purchase ranges from 23.81 to 57.49 (spread: 33.68), wider than the global spread of 21.60.
  • Trend over period: Canada declined 52.4% from October 2024 to September 2025, versus a 30.8% decline globally.
  • Seasonality: Both series were elevated in Q1, with a notable April spike in Canada and broad softening through summer, followed by a sharp September drop.

What the data covers

We summarize median monthly cost per purchase for Facebook Ads. The selected view aggregates E-commerce in Canada; the baseline reflects the global aggregate. Values represent monthly medians across accounts, giving a stable benchmark for advertising costs.

Selected trend overview

  • Average: 47.66 across the 12 months.
  • High and low:
  • High: 57.49 in April 2025.
  • Low: 23.81 in September 2025.
  • Direction: From 50.03 (Oct 2024) to 23.81 (Sep 2025), a -52.4% change.
  • Volatility:
  • Typical month-to-month move around ±7% (median).
  • Notable swings: +9.2% in April; -9.2% in May; -8.8% in June; -45.9% in September.
  • Seasonal notes: Q4 saw moderate movement with a lift into December; Q1 remained elevated (Jan–Mar all above 52), peaking in April, then easing through summer before a pronounced September dip.

Comparison vs global baseline

  • Overall positioning: In line with the global benchmark on average (-0.35% vs market).
  • Highs and lows:
  • Global high: 53.89 in February 2025.
  • Global low: 32.29 in September 2025.
  • Relative by month:
  • Above market: October, November, April, May, June.
  • In line: March.
  • Below market: December, January, February, July, August, September.
  • Spread to market:
  • In 9 of 12 months, Canada stayed within ±8% of the global level.
  • Outliers: April was 11.5% above market; September was 26.3% below market.
  • Volatility comparison:
  • Canada’s higher median month-to-month change (≈7%) vs global (≈2–3%) indicates more fluctuation around the overall trend.

Seasonal patterns and monthly highlights

  • Q4: Globally, costs climbed sharply into December (+19.3% from November). Canada also rose in December but more modestly (+4.5% from November), keeping it slightly below global that month.
  • Q1: Both series remained elevated; Canada averaged 52.55 vs global 52.94, largely in line.
  • April spike: Canada reached its yearly high (57.49), sitting 11.5% above the global level that month.
  • Summer softening: A steady decline June–August, with Canada dipping below market in July and August.
  • September reset: A broad market reset with a steep drop—Canada down 45.9% month over month; global down 29.3%.

Summary

Compared to the global benchmark, cost per purchase for Facebook Ads in E-commerce within Canada tracks broadly in line on average, with higher volatility and a wider range. Elevated costs in Q1 and an April peak align with typical seasonal patterns, while the sharp September drop stands out across both series. Understanding cost per purchase benchmarks on Facebook Ads in industry E-commerce and Canada helps advertisers make more efficient budget and creative choices.

Understanding the Data

Insights & analysis of Facebook advertising costs

Facebook advertising costs vary based on many factors including industry, target audience, ad placement, and campaign objectives. In the E-commerce industry, Facebook ad costs can be varied, with peaks during holiday seasons and competitive product categories. For campaigns targeting Canada, advertisers should consider local market factors and user behavior. Different campaign objectives lead to varying costs based on how Facebook optimizes for your specific goals. The data shown represents median values across multiple campaigns, and individual results may vary based on ad quality, audience targeting, and campaign optimization.

Why we use median instead of average

We use the median CTR because the underlying distribution of click-through rates is highly skewed, with a small share of campaigns achieving extremely high CTRs. These outliers can inflate a simple average, making it less representative of what most advertisers actually experience. By using the median—which sits at the midpoint of all campaigns—we provide a more rigorous and realistic benchmark that reflects the true underlying data model and helps you set attainable performance expectations.

Key Factors Affecting Facebook Ad Costs

  • Competition within your selected industry and audience demographics
  • Ad quality and relevance score – higher quality ads can lower costs
  • Campaign objective and bid strategy
  • Timing and seasonality – costs often increase during holiday periods
  • Ad placement (News Feed, Instagram, Audience Network, etc.)

Note: This data represents industry median values and benchmarks. Your actual costs may vary based on specific targeting, ad creative quality, and campaign optimization.

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The data behind the benchmarks

All data is sourced from over $3B in Facebook ad spend, collected across thousands of ad accounts that use Superads daily to analyze and improve their campaigns. Every data point is fully anonymized and aggregated—no individual advertiser is ever exposed.

This dataset updates frequently as new ad data flows in. It will only get bigger and better.

Canada Advertising Landscape

National Holidays

Jan 1New Year's Day
Feb (3rd Mon)Family Day
Apr 18Good Friday
Apr 21Easter Monday (federal)
May (Victoria Day)Victoria Day
Jul 1Canada Day
Sep (1st Mon)Labour Day
Oct (2nd Mon)Thanksgiving
Nov 11Remembrance Day
Dec 25Christmas Day
Dec 26Boxing Day

Key Shopping Season

Late November (Black Friday and Cyber Monday), December (holiday shopping, Boxing Day), Back-to-school (August-September), Mother's Day (May)

Potential Advertising Impact

CPM might increase during Canada Day, Labour Day, and Thanksgiving. Black Friday and Cyber Monday see heightened e‑commerce bidding. December holiday period may spike ad costs. Back-to-school and Mother's Day drive retail competition. Provincial holidays might alter weekday inventory availability.

What's a healthy cost per purchase for ecommerce brands?

It depends on your product price and margins. Most brands aim for $10 to $50. For higher-ticket products, a higher CPA may be acceptable as long as you're maintaining a strong return on ad spend.

How does product price impact CPA benchmarks?

Higher-priced products typically have a higher CPA because people take longer to convert. That's not necessarily a problem if your margin can support it. You should measure CPA in context with AOV and LTV.

Why are my purchase costs going up despite stable ROAS?

Your AOV may be increasing, which helps maintain ROAS even if CPA rises. You could also be facing higher CPMs, lower conversion rates, or creative fatigue.

Should I use manual bidding to control CPA more effectively?

Manual bidding can help if you're struggling to stay within target CPA. It's best used by experienced advertisers who can monitor performance and adjust regularly. It gives more control, but also requires more effort.

How do I scale spend without letting CPA skyrocket?

Increase budget gradually, rotate creative often, and avoid overlapping audiences. Scaling too quickly can lead to audience saturation and rising CPAs.