Google Ads for HVAC businesses in Australia works — but only when the campaign is built to stop paying for the wrong person. Right now, you’re probably paying Google to send you researchers, job seekers and DIYers instead of booked jobs.
Picture it: a homeowner in Chatswood searches “how to fix aircon not cooling” at noon on a 38°C Sydney day. Google shows your ad. They click. You pay $45. They read a forum post, reset their unit, and never contact you. That scenario plays out dozens of times a day in most unoptimised HVAC Google Ads accounts across Australia.
In Webco’s audits of HVAC campaigns with combined monthly spend exceeding $380,000, we consistently find 40–60% of budget is consumed by “curiosity clicks” — searches from people researching, not buying. The fix isn’t to spend more. It’s to stop paying for the wrong intent and route every dollar toward the person ready to book right now.
Quick answer: Google Ads for HVAC in Australia works best when campaigns are built around immediate-need, transactional keywords (“emergency AC repair near me”, “broken aircon repair Sydney”) with tight match types, a comprehensive negative keyword list blocking informational and non-commercial searches, location targeting set to “Presence only” rather than the default “Presence or Interest”, and call conversion tracking with a 60-second minimum duration. Optimised HVAC Google Ads campaigns in Australian metro markets generate inbound calls at $35–$90 per qualified call, compared to $120–$250 per call in unoptimised accounts running broad-match keywords and default location settings.
The $45 Curiosity Tax: Why Your HVAC Leads Leak Before You Call
Let’s be blunt: Google’s default settings are designed to empty your bank account, not fill your schedule. In 2026, the average unoptimised trade ad account wastes 40–60% of monthly spend on exactly the wrong people — students researching careers, people looking for part-time jobs, renters checking costs, and DIYers who will never tap “call”.
The real cost isn’t the click. A single $45 click on “how to fix a dripping tap” is a complete loss — but the opportunity cost of losing that ad spot to a competitor when a genuine emergency lands five minutes later is where Australian HVAC operators really get burned.
The commercial reality. With average HVAC CPCs in Sydney now sitting between $35 and $70 for high-intent terms, you can’t afford to fund “brand awareness”. You need booked jobs in the van today.
Webco’s point of view. The only metric that matters for trade Google Ads is calls that convert to a truck roll. Everything else is expensive theatre.
Well-structured HVAC campaigns can dramatically cut cost per qualified lead while increasing inbound calls and booked jobs — without raising the budget by a dollar. The rest of this guide is the exact five-step structure that gets you there.
“We were paying $190 a call and couldn’t work out why. Webco rebuilt the account around exact-match emergency terms, fixed the location setting, and added call tracking. Eight weeks later we’re at $61 a call and the phone rings with people who actually want a technician — not a price list.”
— HVAC business owner, Western Sydney
Why Most HVAC Google Ads Accounts Bleed Budget From Day One
Google’s default campaign settings are designed to maximise Google’s revenue — not yours. Three default settings cause the majority of HVAC ad spend waste in Australia, and most HVAC businesses never change a single one of them.
| Default setting | What Google does | The cost to your HVAC account |
|---|---|---|
| Broad match keywords | Shows your ad for loosely related searches — “air conditioning course”, “AC unit for sale” | Pays $18–$65 per click for searches that never become jobs |
| “Presence or Interest” location targeting | Shows ads to people merely researching your area — even from another state | Funds clicks from users you can never physically service |
| Clicks-based optimisation (no call tracking) | Smart bidding optimises for cheap clicks because it has no “call” signal | Systematically under-bids on the searches most likely to ring your phone |
Each of these ships on by default. The result is a campaign that looks active — plenty of impressions, a decent click-through rate — but generates expensive leads and a baffling cost per booked job. The five steps below switch every one of these defaults off.
The 5-Step Fix for Google Ads for HVAC in Australia
These five steps, applied in order, are the difference between an HVAC Google Ads account that funds Google and one that fills your schedule. Each one switches off a default that leaks budget — and together they routinely move accounts from $120–$250 per qualified call down to $35–$90. Work through them in sequence; the negative keyword shield comes first because it stops the bleeding fastest.
Step 1: Build Your Negative Keyword Shield (the 'Apprentice Fence')
The single highest-ROI action in any HVAC Google Ads account is building and maintaining a comprehensive negative keyword list — telling Google exactly who not to send you. If a search carries the intent of a job seeker, a student or a DIY owner, your ad must never appear.
The HVAC negative keyword master list — add these as broad-match negatives at campaign level immediately:
Job & career intent: jobs, hiring, apprenticeship, traineeship, training, course, certificate, diploma, school, TAFE, career, salary, wage, employment
DIY & informational intent: how to, DIY, fix myself, troubleshoot, what is, why does, manual, guide, tutorial, diagram, forum
Commercial but wrong buyer: cheap, free, second-hand, used, parts, wholesale, trade price, cost to replace myself
Research intent: review, comparison, best brand, which brand, Daikin vs Mitsubishi, what size
This is a starting point, not a final state. The most important ongoing habit in HVAC Google Ads management is reviewing the Search Terms Report every week and adding irrelevant triggers as negatives immediately. In Webco-managed accounts, active weekly negative keyword maintenance reduces wasted spend by an average of 23% within the first 60 days.
Step 2: Switch to High-Intent Keywords With Controlled Match Types
Broad match keywords are the primary driver of curiosity clicks. Run “air conditioning” on broad match and Google shows your ad for “air conditioning unit for sale”, “air conditioning university course” and “air conditioning troubleshooting” — all of which cost money and generate zero jobs.
Replace broad match with a tiered structure of phrase and exact match keywords, split into three completely separate campaigns:
The ‘Now’ bucket — Emergency / Repair (highest priority, highest CPL tolerance): [emergency AC repair Sydney], [broken aircon repair near me], “aircon not working” + location, [emergency heating repair Melbourne]
The ‘Value’ bucket — Installation (high value, longer decision cycle): “split system installation” + suburb, [ducted air conditioning installation quote], “new aircon install” + location
The ‘Annuity’ bucket — Servicing / Maintenance (volume, recurring revenue): “aircon service” + suburb, [AC servicing near me], “annual HVAC maintenance” + location
Keep the three campaigns completely separate — separate budgets, bids and landing pages. The person searching “emergency broken aircon” and the person searching “annual aircon service” have entirely different urgency, price tolerance and conversion paths. Never use broad match for HVAC. In metro markets where HVAC CPC runs $18–$65, a single mis-triggered broad click can consume the margin on an entire service call.
Step 3: Fix Location Targeting — the Setting Most HVAC Operators Miss
This is the most under-discussed setting in HVAC Google Ads — and one of the most expensive when left on default. Google targets “People in, or who show interest in, your targeted locations” by default. That means your ad can show to someone in Brisbane who has merely been researching Melbourne suburbs — even if you only service Melbourne.
How to fix it in three clicks: Campaign settings → Locations → Location options → change Target from “Presence or Interest” to “Presence: People in or regularly in your targeted locations”.
This single change is consistently one of the top three wasted-spend fixes in every new HVAC account Webco audits. Beyond the target setting:
Target specific suburbs or a defined radius from your depot — not just the city name
Add location exclusions for suburbs or areas outside your service radius
Multiple depots? Build separate ad groups or campaigns per service zone, each with its own radius targeting
Outcome: Every click comes from someone you can physically dispatch a technician to.
Step 4: Optimise for Calls, Not Clicks — the 38-Degree Rule
When a homeowner’s air conditioning fails on a 38°C summer afternoon, they don’t fill in a contact form and wait for a callback. They call — immediately, from the search results, before they even visit your website. For HVAC emergency campaigns, the call is the conversion.
Set up call conversion tracking with a 60-second minimum. A 15-second call is a misdial; a 60-second call is almost always a lead. Without call tracking, Google’s smart bidding has no signal to optimise against and will bid for cheap clicks instead of booked jobs.
Use call ads and call extensions on every campaign. Over 70% of urgent HVAC search volume in Australia is mobile. Call ads consistently outperform standard text ads by 30–50% on call conversion rate in Webco client data, and call extensions cost nothing extra.
Schedule ads for answerable hours only. There’s no value paying for a 2am call that hits voicemail converting at 3%. Run emergency campaigns when your team — or a live answering service — can actually pick up.
Outcome: Smart bidding optimises toward the searches that ring your phone, not the ones that pad your click count.
Step 5: Match Landing Pages to Search Intent
Sending all HVAC ad traffic to your homepage is one of the most common and costly campaign mistakes. A homeowner searching “emergency broken aircon repair” is in distress — they need a phone number, a fast-response promise, and a “call now” button within 3 seconds of landing. Your homepage, with its nav menu and company history, is the wrong page for that person.
Build a dedicated landing page for each campaign type:
Emergency / Repair page: phone number above the fold, “onsite in 2 hours” promise, minimal navigation, one-thumb call button
Installation page: quote form, finance options, system comparison, trust signals and reviews
Servicing / Maintenance page: maintenance plan pricing, online booking calendar, recurring-service value messaging
Each landing page must load in under 3 seconds on mobile. Pages loading in 4+ seconds see 25–50% higher bounce rates on HVAC ad traffic — directly inflating your cost per lead.
What Good HVAC Google Ads Performance Looks Like in Australia
Once these five fixes are in place, here are the benchmarks Webco tracks for well-optimised HVAC Google Ads accounts in Australian metro markets. Use them to grade your own account.
| Metric | Unoptimised account | Well-optimised account |
|---|---|---|
| Cost per qualified call | $120–$250 | $35–$90 |
| Wasted spend (curiosity clicks) | 40–60% | Under 15% |
| Call conversion rate (emergency) | 3–6% | 12–20%+ |
| Recommended monthly budget (single metro) | Spent inefficiently | $2,000–$4,000 |
| Landing page load time | 4+ seconds | Under 3 seconds |
The pattern is consistent: optimised accounts don’t spend more — they spend the same budget on dramatically better intent. The 4.8x improvement in cost-per-call efficiency comes entirely from switching off Google’s revenue-maximising defaults.
Combine Google Ads With Local SEO for a Compounding Pipeline
Google Ads is the fastest way to capture immediate emergency demand — but it stops the moment you stop paying. For a lead pipeline that compounds without ongoing ad spend, run HVAC Google Ads alongside local SEO.
The two channels do different jobs:
Google Ads covers urgent, high-intent emergency demand from day one — the 38°C-afternoon panic calls that can’t wait for organic rankings to mature
Local SEO builds the organic pipeline — Google Business Profile, suburb landing pages, review velocity — that lowers your blended cost per lead over 12–18 months
HVAC operators running both channels together typically see blended cost-per-lead fall steadily as the organic pipeline matures, while Ads keeps the emergency phone ringing throughout. Ads buys you time; SEO buys you margin. Run them as one connected system, not two competing line items — and make sure your highest-intent keyword research feeds both.
Frequently Asked Questions: Google Ads for HVAC Australia
How much should an HVAC company spend on Google Ads in Australia?
For a single-location HVAC business targeting one metro area, a realistic starting budget is $2,000–$4,000 per month. This generates enough call volume — typically 30–50 conversions per month minimum — for Google’s smart bidding to optimise effectively. Budgets below $1,500/month in competitive Sydney or Melbourne markets often struggle to achieve sufficient impression share during peak demand. Multi-location operators typically invest $4,000–$12,000/month across combined campaigns.
What is the average cost per click for HVAC Google Ads in Australia?
HVAC Google Ads CPCs in Australia range from $18 to $65 per click for phrase and exact match keywords in major metro markets, with emergency repair terms at the top end. “Emergency AC repair Sydney” can reach $55–$80 per click during peak summer demand. Servicing and maintenance terms are typically $12–$30. These ranges make negative keyword management and match type discipline critical — a single broad-match trigger at these prices has an outsized budget impact.
Should HVAC businesses use Smart Campaigns or manual Google Ads?
Smart Campaigns are not recommended for HVAC businesses with monthly budgets above $1,500. They offer limited control over match types, location targeting and negative keywords — exactly the controls that prevent wasted spend. Standard Search Campaigns with manual CPC bidding, or Target CPA bidding once sufficient conversion data exists, provide the transparency and control needed to manage HVAC ad spend profitably.
What keywords should HVAC companies avoid in Google Ads?
The highest-waste keyword categories for HVAC Google Ads in Australia are informational queries (“how to fix aircon”), job and career terms (“HVAC jobs”, “aircon apprenticeship”), product-only searches (“split system unit price”, “Daikin outdoor unit”), and broad brand terms without service intent. Adding these as campaign-level negative keywords before launching eliminates the single largest source of wasted budget in most new HVAC accounts.
How do I track whether Google Ads is generating actual booked jobs for my HVAC business?
Set up Google’s native call conversion tracking with a 60-second minimum duration to filter misdials, and connect Google Ads to Google Analytics 4 to track form submissions. For accurate job-level attribution, use a field service CRM like ServiceM8 or Simpro — both widely used by Australian HVAC operators — and ask every new customer how they found you at booking. First-party attribution data from your own team is the most reliable signal for actual revenue impact from ads.
Stop Paying the Curiosity Tax — Book Your Free Google Ads Audit
Webco audits HVAC Google Ads accounts against every fix in this guide: negative keyword gaps, broad-match leaks, the location targeting default, missing call tracking, and intent-mismatched landing pages.
No lock-in contracts. No vanity dashboards. Just a clear, written breakdown of exactly where your budget is leaking — and the specific changes that move you from $120–$250 per call down toward the $35–$90 benchmark.
Book a free 20-minute HVAC Google Ads audit. We’ll review your live account, Search Terms Report, and top 3 competitor ad positions — and hand you a prioritised fix list you can action this week, whether you work with us or not.