Last Updated on June 22, 2026

A clear breakdown of every option, from free tools to £30,000 agency reviews. So you can decide what is actually worth paying for.
What this article covers
Most UK businesses do not know what a marketing audit should cost. So they either pay too much, pay for the wrong thing, or convince themselves they do not need one.
The result? They keep spending on marketing that is not working, with no way to tell what to fix first.
This is a clear breakdown of what a marketing audit actually costs in 2026, what you get at each price point, and how to decide which option fits your business.
No upsells. No “it depends.” Just numbers.

The Real Cost of a Marketing Audit in 2026
Here is the range you will find in the UK market right now:
| Audit Type | Typical Cost | Turnaround | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| DIY using free tools | £0 | Hours (your time) | Businesses that know what to look for |
| Freelance consultant | £300 to £800 | 1 to 2 weeks | Specific channel review (SEO only, ads only) |
| Independent deep audit | £497 | 5 working days | Full marketing health check with action plan |
| Small agency audit | £1,000 to £2,500 | 3 to 4 weeks | Businesses considering hiring that agency |
| Large agency audit | £3,000 to £5,000+ | 4 to 6 weeks | Complex multi-channel businesses |
| Full brand audit | £5,000 to £30,000 | 6 to 12 weeks | Established brands needing repositioning |
Your Four Options Compared
There are really only four routes. Each has trade-offs.

Option 1: Do it yourself (£0)
Google Analytics, Google Search Console, free SEMrush tier, a checklist from the internet. You can audit your own marketing for nothing.
The catch: you need to know what to look for. Most business owners check vanity metrics (traffic, followers, impressions) and miss the structural problems (attribution gaps, cannibalised keywords, broken conversion paths). You end up confirming your existing assumptions instead of challenging them.
Option 2: Hire a freelance consultant (£300 to £800)
A freelance marketing consultant charging £50 to £100 per hour will typically spend 4 to 8 hours on an audit. That covers one or two channels, surface-level recommendations, and a written summary.
Good for a channel-specific check, like an SEO audit or paid ads review. Not designed to give you a full picture of what is working, what is wasted, and what to prioritise across your entire marketing.
Quality varies wildly. Some freelancers deliver templated reports. Others are exceptional but charge agency rates.
Option 3: Independent deep audit (£497)
This is what Whito offers. A full marketing audit across every channel, delivered in 5 working days, with a prioritised action plan. No retainer attached. No upsell to managed services.
The difference is independence. An agency audit exists to sell you the agency. An independent audit exists to tell you the truth, even when the truth is uncomfortable.
Option 4: Agency audit (£1,000 to £5,000+)
Agencies often offer “free” or discounted audits as a sales tool. The audit is the top of their funnel. That does not mean the work is bad, but it does mean the recommendations will lean towards services they sell.
If you are already considering hiring an agency and want to evaluate their thinking, an agency audit makes sense. If you want an objective assessment before deciding what to do next, it does not.
Large agency audits (£3,000+) are thorough but slow. Expect 4 to 6 weeks, multiple meetings, and a PDF that could be shorter.
The most expensive marketing audit is the one you do not get.
UK businesses waste an estimated 30 to 60% of their marketing budgets on wrong-stage activity. That is money spent on tactics that do not match where the business actually is.
Running paid ads before your website converts. Posting on social media without knowing which platform your customers use. Paying for an email tool you have not set up properly.

If your business spends £2,000 a month on marketing and 30% is wasted, that is £600 a month going nowhere. £7,200 a year. An audit that identifies even half of that waste pays for itself before the end of the second month.
6 Signs You Actually Need a Marketing Audit
Not every business needs one right now. But most businesses that think they do not, do.

If three or more of these apply to you, something structural is off. It is not a matter of trying harder or spending more. You need someone outside the business to look at it clearly.
1. You cannot name your top 3 marketing channels by ROI. Not by traffic, not by engagement. By actual return on investment. If you cannot, you are guessing where to put your budget.
2. You are paying for tools you do not fully use. The average UK business subscribes to 4 to 6 marketing tools. Most use less than half the features. Some have tools running they forgot about entirely.
3. Your agency reports look impressive but revenue is flat. If the graphs go up but the bank balance does not, someone is measuring the wrong things.
4. You have not changed your marketing approach in over 12 months. The landscape moves fast. Google has changed how search results work. Social algorithms have shifted. What worked in 2024 may be actively costing you in 2026.
5. You spend on “brand awareness” with no way to measure it. Brand awareness is real, but it is also the easiest place to hide wasted spend. If you cannot connect it to a number, question it.
6. Your website gets traffic but almost no enquiries. This means your conversion path is broken. More traffic will not fix a leaking bucket. You need to find the holes first.
What a Proper Marketing Audit Should Cover
If someone offers you a “marketing audit” that only looks at one channel, that is a channel review, not an audit. A proper audit looks at your entire marketing ecosystem and how the parts connect.

| Area | What Gets Reviewed | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Website and SEO | Technical health, page speed, keyword rankings, content gaps, mobile experience | Your website is your shopfront. If it is slow or invisible on Google, nothing else works. |
| Paid advertising | Ad spend efficiency, targeting, cost per lead, wasted spend, attribution | Most UK businesses overspend on ads because they do not track what converts. |
| Social media | Platform relevance, content performance, audience match, posting consistency | Being on every platform is not a strategy. Being on the right one is. |
| Email marketing | List health, open rates, automation, segmentation, deliverability | Email remains the highest ROI channel for most UK businesses. If it is broken, you are leaving money on the table. |
| Content and messaging | Brand consistency, value proposition clarity, content-to-conversion path | If your message is unclear, no amount of traffic fixes it. |
| Analytics and tracking | GA4 setup, conversion tracking, attribution model, data accuracy | Bad data leads to bad decisions. Most setups have gaps the business owner does not know about. |
| Competitor benchmarking | Positioning comparison, channel strategy, content gaps, pricing context | You need to know where you stand relative to competitors, not just in isolation. |
| Action plan | Prioritised recommendations, quick wins, 30/60/90 day roadmap | An audit without clear next steps is just a list of problems. The action plan is where the value sits. |
Does a Marketing Audit Pay for Itself?
In most cases, yes. And quickly.
A mid-market UK business spending £2,000 a month on marketing typically sees a 300 to 450% return within the first quarter after an audit. Not because the audit generates revenue directly, but because it stops the waste and redirects budget to what actually works.
The maths is not complicated. If an audit finds £600 a month in wasted spend and helps you redirect even half of it, the £497 investment pays back before the invoice is 60 days old.
The cheapest marketing mistake is the one you catch early. An audit is the catching mechanism.
The Verdict
If you know what you are doing and just need a structured check, DIY it.
If you need a single channel reviewed, a freelancer is fine.
If you want someone independent to look at everything, tell you what is actually working, and give you a prioritised plan you can act on without being sold a retainer, an independent audit at £497 is the clearest value.
If you are already committed to hiring an agency and want to evaluate their thinking, their audit process has value as part of that decision.
The wrong choice is doing nothing and hoping the problem sorts itself out. It will not.
Not sure where to start?
Get a free marketing health check first. It takes 5 minutes, costs nothing, and tells you whether a full audit is worth it for your business.
Whito is an independent UK marketing guidance platform. We do not sell agency services. We help you understand what to fix first.
Common questions
How much does a marketing audit cost in the UK?
It ranges from free DIY tools to around £30,000 for a full agency review, with paid professional audits in between. The right level depends on your size and how much you spend on marketing.
Is a marketing audit worth paying for?
It can be, if it tells you what to fix first. The hidden cost of skipping one is continuing to spend on marketing that is not working, with no way to prioritise. Match the audit depth to your spend.
What should a marketing audit cover?
A proper audit reviews your channels, spend, results and where money is being wasted, and ends with a prioritised list of what to fix first, not a sales pitch for more services.

