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Reviewed by Jacob Whitmore, Whito · Fact-checked for accuracy

Last Updated on May 26, 2026

UK Marketing Budget Calculator

Find out what you should spend on marketing and where to focus.

UK Marketing Budget Benchmarks

The widely cited standard for established UK businesses is 7-10% of annual revenue. But that figure covers only businesses with stable revenue streams and existing brand awareness. For UK SMEs under £10M revenue, the real-world range is closer to 7-16.8%, depending on growth stage, based on synthesis of Gartner CMO Survey and Deloitte CMO Survey data.

7-16.8%
The realistic range for UK SMEs
Smaller businesses need a higher percentage because fixed marketing costs (website, tools, content production) represent a larger share of a lower turnover. As revenue grows, the percentage required typically falls.

Recommended Marketing Budget by Revenue Band

Annual RevenueStageRecommended % of RevenueExample Annual Budget
Under £100kStart12-20%£12,000 - £20,000
£100k - £500kBuild10-15%£20,000 - £75,000
£500k - £2.5MBuild / Scale8-12%£40,000 - £300,000
£2.5M+Scale5-10%£125,000+

Smaller businesses need a proportionally higher spend for two reasons. First, marketing has fixed baseline costs (a credible website, basic SEO tools, content creation) that do not scale down linearly with revenue. Second, early-stage businesses are buying awareness from zero, whereas an established business benefits from existing brand recognition, referrals, and organic search traffic that reduce the need for paid acquisition.

These benchmarks are drawn from Whito's original research. See the full analysis and methodology at How Much Should Marketing Cost? (UK Guide).








Your Marketing Budget

Channel Allocation

Prioritised Spending Plan

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How This Calculator Works

The calculator uses a stage-based benchmark model. Each growth stage (Start, Build, Scale) maps to a percentage range derived from UK SME marketing spend patterns. When you enter your revenue and stage, the calculator selects the midpoint range for that band and applies an industry-specific channel allocation to show where that budget should go.

Channel allocation percentages are informed by industry-level data on where UK businesses in each sector generate the best return. A trades business, for example, generates most enquiries through local search and Google Ads, so those channels receive a larger share. A professional services firm relies more on content and LinkedIn, so the split reflects that.

Data Sources

Gartner CMO Spend Survey
Annual benchmark for marketing budget as a percentage of revenue across company sizes and industries.
Deloitte CMO Survey
Longitudinal data on channel mix, digital vs. traditional split, and budget trends across UK and global markets.
UK Government Business Statistics
BEIS and ONS data on UK SME revenue distribution and sector composition used to calibrate the revenue bands.
Whito Audit Database
Anonymised data from Whito marketing audits across UK SMEs, used to ground-truth benchmark percentages against real business outcomes.

Full methodology and source citations are available in the Whito research article: How Much Should Marketing Cost? (UK Guide).

Marketing Budget FAQs

Practical answers to the questions UK business owners ask most about marketing spend.

UK small businesses typically spend between 7% and 16.8% of annual revenue on marketing, depending on growth stage and revenue band. Businesses under £500k revenue generally need the higher end of that range, around 10-15%, because fixed marketing costs (website, tools, content) take a larger slice of a smaller turnover. Businesses turning over £2.5M or more can often achieve results at 5-10% due to economies of scale.
A good starting point for a UK startup is 12-20% of projected or actual revenue. In the early stage, the priority is building visibility from zero, which requires proportionally more spend than maintaining an established brand. Focus the budget on two or three channels rather than spreading it thin: typically a professional website with basic SEO, Google Business Profile, and one paid channel.
Yes, counterintuitively, cutting marketing during a slow period tends to make the slowdown worse and longer. Marketing spend drives future pipeline, so reducing it creates a gap that compounds over the following weeks and months. A better approach is to review channel efficiency and shift budget away from underperforming channels rather than reducing the total.
The standard benchmark for established UK businesses is 7-10% of revenue, but this varies significantly by stage. Start-stage businesses (under £100k revenue) need 12-20%, build-stage businesses (£100k-£2.5M) need 8-15%, and scale-stage businesses (£2.5M+) can operate effectively at 5-10%. These figures are based on Gartner CMO Survey data and Whito's analysis of UK SME marketing audit data.
£500 per month (£6,000 per year) is workable for a very early-stage local business, but it requires strict prioritisation. At that budget, focus on Google Business Profile and local SEO first, then add one paid channel once the foundation is solid. Do not spread £500 across five channels; the spend will be too thin to generate measurable results on any of them.
For most UK small businesses, the answer depends on how quickly you need leads. If you need enquiries within 30 days, start with Google Ads alongside basic SEO setup. If you have 6-12 months before you need strong organic traffic, invest first in SEO because the compounding returns are significantly higher long-term. In practice, a 60/40 split favouring ads early, then flipping that ratio as SEO matures, works well for most service businesses.
Track cost per lead (CPL) and cost per acquisition (CPA) for each channel, and compare them against your average order or contract value. If a channel's CPA is higher than the gross profit on a typical sale, it is losing money regardless of how busy it keeps you. Set a 90-day review cycle and cut any channel that has not produced a measurable result after three months.
As revenue grows, the percentage of revenue needed for marketing generally falls. Early-stage businesses spend a higher proportion because they are buying awareness from zero. Once you have organic visibility, a customer base, and referrals working, paid acquisition becomes a smaller portion of total spend. The mix also changes: brand and retention investment increases relative to pure acquisition.

Research and data sources: How Much Should Marketing Cost? A UK Business Guide by Whito.

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