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ACOS vs TACOS: why your ad math is lying to you

2026-06-19·2 min read
PPCACOSadvertising

Sellers obsess over ACOS because it's the number Amazon puts in front of them. ACOS is ad spend divided by ad-attributed sales. That sounds complete, but it hides the part that matters.

ACOS only sees the sales your ads touched

If you spend $100 on ads and those ads drove $500 in attributed sales, your ACOS is 20%. Fine. But your total sales that day might have been $1,200. The other $700 came from organic, brand searches, or repeat buyers — customers who found you without an ad pushing them.

ACOS tells you how your ad dollars performed on the sales they touched. It says nothing about whether the overall business is healthy.

TACOS is the honest version

TACOS is total ad spend divided by total revenue. Same $100 spend, $1,200 total sales: TACOS is about 8%. That's the number that tells you what fraction of your whole business is riding on paid traffic.

A brand with 4% TACOS is mostly earning its sales. A brand with 40% TACOS is one bad bid change away from flatlining. ACOS can look great while TACOS quietly climbs, because you're buying more of the sales you used to get free.

The trap

The classic mistake: ACOS looks high, so you cut bids. Sales drop. You cut more. Now you're paying the same rent and software but moving half the volume, so your per-unit fixed costs double and the product goes red — all to fix an ACOS number that was never the real problem.

The real problem is usually the organic rank underneath. If your organic sales are weak, you're forced to buy the sale, and no bid tweak fixes that. You fix it with a better listing, better reviews, and better targeting so the ad spend converts cheaper.

What to watch

Track both. ACOS for day-to-day bid decisions, TACOS for the monthly "are we building a business or renting sales?" check. If TACOS is rising while ACOS holds, you're not scaling — you're drifting toward paying for traffic you used to own.