If you ask a marketing agency, “How much does it cost to get a new Invisalign patient?” you will rarely get a straight answer. They will throw acronyms at you. They will talk about impressions, click-through rates, and algorithms.
But as a practice owner, you only care about the bottom line. You are running a business, not a digital arts project. You need to know exactly how many pounds you have to put into the machine to get a £4,000 treatment plan out the other side.
To figure this out, you must understand the critical difference between the two most important metrics in dental marketing: Cost Per Lead (CPL) and Cost Per Acquisition (CPA).
Confusing the two is the fastest way to drain your marketing budget and frustrate your reception team.
CPL vs. CPA: What is the Difference?
Cost Per Lead (CPL): This is the cost to get someone’s contact information. They clicked your Facebook ad and submitted a form with their name, email, and phone number. They are a potential patient.
Cost Per Acquisition (CPA): This is the cost to get a paying patient into the chair who actually accepts the treatment plan. They have handed over their credit card or signed the finance agreement. They are a real patient.
Agencies love to sell you on a low CPL. It makes them look good. “Look, we got you 50 implant leads for just £20 each!”
But if none of those 50 people actually show up to the practice or qualify for surgery, your CPA is £0, and you just wasted £1,000.
The Math: Why the "Expensive" Lead is Cheaper
Let’s look at two common scenarios for a practice trying to sell £3,500 Invisalign packages.
Scenario A: The “Cheap Lead” Strategy
You run a broad, generic ad offering a “Free Invisalign Consult.” The form is short. Anyone can click it.
- CPL: £50.
- Leads Generated: 20.
- Total Ad Spend: £1,000.
- The Reality: 15 of them don’t answer the phone. 3 book but don’t show up. 2 show up, but only 1 accepts treatment.
Your True CPA: You spent £1,000 to get 1 patient. Your CPA is £1,000.
Scenario B: The "High-Intent Lead" Strategy
You run an ad that clearly states the starting price (£3,500) and requires the patient to fill out a 5-question pre-qualification survey before booking. You also charge a £30 refundable deposit to hold the consultation slot.
- CPL: £150 (Because you added friction, fewer people fill it out, so each lead costs more to generate).
- Leads Generated: 10.
- Total Ad Spend: £1,500.
- The Reality: Because they jumped through hoops and paid a deposit, 9 show up. They already know the price, so 3 of them accept treatment.
- Your True CPA: You spent £1,500 to get 3 patients. Your CPA is £500.
In Scenario B, the lead cost three times as much to generate (£150 vs £50). But the actual patient cost half as much to acquire (£500 vs £1,000).
The Hidden Costs of Cheap Leads
When you chase a low CPL, you aren’t just wasting ad spend. You are bleeding money internally.
Reception Burnout: Your front desk is paid to manage the patients in front of them, not to act as an outbound call centre. Chasing cheap leads who don’t want to talk to you destroys team morale.
Wasted Chair Time: If a “tyre kicker” actually makes it into the chair for a free 30-minute consult and then says, “Oh, I didn’t realise implants were more than £500,” you have just lost £150+ in hourly surgery overheads.
The 2026 Benchmarks: What Should You Expect to Pay?
The cost of advertising on Google and Meta (Facebook/Instagram) fluctuates, but in the UK market right now, here are realistic benchmarks for a well-optimised campaign:
Invisalign/Clear Aligners:
- Good CPL: £60 – £120
- Target CPA: £300 – £600
ROI: Spending £500 to make £3,500 is a fantastic return.
Dental Implants (Single/Multiple):
Good CPL: £100 – £250
Target CPA: £500 – £900
ROI: Implants are higher friction. But spending £800 to secure a £5,000+ treatment plan still yields excellent profitability.
Note: These numbers assume your front-of-house team has excellent telephone conversion skills. If your reception team cannot sell a consultation, your CPA will skyrocket regardless of how good the ads are.
Summary
Stop looking at the cost of the click. Start looking at the cost of the chair.
Understand the Metrics: CPL is a vanity metric. CPA is a business metric.
Add Friction: Don’t be afraid to ask qualifying questions on your web forms. It filters out the time-wasters.
Know Your Margins: If an implant brings in £2,000 profit, spending £600 to acquire that patient makes perfect business sense.
Track Everything: Connect your ads to your practice management software so you know exactly which £150 lead turned into a £10,000 full-arch case.
If you are tired of paying for leads that never answer the phone, it is time to shift your strategy from volume to value.
Click here to book a strategy call with Dentify Digital.
