The ad budget went up. The clicks kept coming. The leads didn’t move.
If that’s the shape of your last two quarters, you’re not alone and it isn’t a campaign problem. It’s a math problem, and the math changed.
Cost-per-click for RV dealers climbed 14.05% by the end of 2025. Click-through and conversion rates both dropped. You’re paying more to get people to your site, and if your vehicle pages aren’t pulling their weight, fewer shoppers are doing anything when they get there. The natural response is to spend more. The better response is to look at what the spend is landing on, because spending more on a broken loop doesn’t fix the loop.
Your listing is where the money is leaking
Picture a buyer you’ve seen a hundred times. They find one of your units through a Google Vehicle Ad, click through, and land on a listing with no price, two photos, and a description that tells them roughly nothing. They leave.
Three days later they come back on their own, organically, because they’re still thinking about it. The listing looks the same. They move on to the next dealership.
That buyer was ready. Your ad brought them in twice. The listing cost you the conversation both times, and nothing in your reporting flagged it, because there’s no alert that says this person left because the VDP wasn’t ready for them. The leak just keeps going.
This is where most paid search spend breaks down, not in the campaign, but in what the campaign sends buyers to. And the fix isn’t complicated. Among the fastest-turning RV dealers, 83.3% of listings include pricing, units carry an average of 10.2 photos, and fewer than 21% sit past 90 days. Listings with pricing and financing options generate 47.9% more high-quality leads. Pricing alone answers the first question your buyer has before they’re willing to ask it out loud.
The top 10% aren’t outspending anyone
A number worth sitting with: the top 10% of RV dealers generate 4.5 times more leads than the industry average and turn inventory 54% faster. Not because they have bigger budgets. Because fewer things are breaking between the first search and the final conversation.
RV buyers are not powersports buyers. They are not car buyers. They take their time, they do their research, they come back to the same listing three times, and they often involve a spouse before they do anything. A strategy that treats them like impulse shoppers will lose them quietly, not dramatically, just slowly, and you won’t always know why.
What the top performers share isn’t a bigger spend. It’s consistency. Their inventory shows up where buyers search. Their listings answer real questions. Their follow-up stays alive across weeks, not just days. Everything connects.
Stop watching CPC. Watch these instead.
When click costs rise, the instinct is to chase more clicks for the same money. Clicks were never the goal. Conversations were.
Three numbers tell you whether the loop is working: cost per inquiry, cost per conversion, and lead quality by channel. The first tells you what it costs to get a real hand-raise. The second tells you what it costs to turn that hand-raise into a sales conversation. The third tells you which sources bring buyers who are close to deciding versus browsing at 11 p.m.
If your current reporting isn’t showing you all three, that’s worth fixing before you touch the ad budget.
Paid search works better when it isn’t doing everything alone
A buyer who clicks your ad today might not be ready to call for three more weeks. If the paid click is your only move, most of the relationship is left on the table.
Dealers who add automated email marketing see an average 30.85% increase in inventory turnover on average, with a 16.9% click-to-open rate, more than three times the industry benchmark. Dealers who layer SEO alongside paid see an additional average 8.62% lift. Neither replaces paid advertising. They make paid more effective by keeping you in front of buyers through the weeks-long consideration cycle that defines how RV purchases work.
See how the average number of physical visits has dwindled, and why digital efforts matter to keep your dealership top of mind for online shoppers:
Where to go from here
We recently sat down with RV Pro to walk through what this looks like in practice, the channels, the listing fixes, the metrics to which dealers should be holding their teams in 2026. If you’re trying to decide where the next dollar of ad spend should go, this conversation is a useful hour of your time.
Watch: Rethinking Paid Media for RV Dealers →
For a deeper read, the 2026 Digital Playbook for RV Dealers lays out the full connected strategy. And if you’d rather talk it through with someone who has been working with RV dealers since 2002, our team is here.
All statistics sourced from The State of the RV Dealer: 2026 and InteractRV’s network of 600+ RV dealerships. Not for attribution to any external third-party brand in published materials.
