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Free tool
Cheap clicks, long save-to-purchase window, mostly visual ecommerce. Plug in your CPC, AOV, and conversion rate to see what budget you need across three scenarios. Built for Promoted Pins, Idea Pins, and Pinterest Shopping campaigns.
For interior designers, wedding planners, course creators, and B2C-service offers where the buyer plans for weeks before booking.
Lead generation budget
| Metric | Worst case | Moderate | Best case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Form conversion rate | % | % | % |
| Clicks per lead | — | — | — |
| CPL | — | — | — |
| Leads required | — | — | — |
| Orders required | — | — | — |
| CPA (cost per sale) | — | — | — |
| Quarterly budget | — | — | — |
| Monthly budget | — | — | — |
| Daily budget | — | — | — |
| ROAS | — | — | — |
How it works
Plug in real numbers, compare three scenarios, plan moderate. Set a 30-day attribution window in your reporting before you judge the result.
sales_goal = $100,000 cpc = $0.80 cr = 2.5% aov = $120
Sales goal, AOV, and a real account CPC. Ads Manager forecasts run optimistic, so use a 30-day average once you have spend.
Worst, moderate, best for click-to-order. Pinterest converts higher than other social channels because Pinners arrive in planning mode.
Pinterest Shopping, Q2
Run moderate as your monthly cap. Wait 30 days before judging ROAS, the save-then-buy window distorts week-one numbers badly.
Inputs explained
Six inputs total. The first three apply to both modes; the last three depend on whether you run lead gen or ecommerce.
Sales goal
Quarterly revenue from Pinterest. Pinners save first and buy later, so plan the goal across a 30 to 60 day attribution window, not a single click-purchase view.
Average CPC
30-day average from Pinterest Ads Manager. Pinterest runs cheap at $0.50 to $1.50 per click, with Idea Pins and Shopping ads at the lower end and broad-keyword Promoted Pins at the higher end.
Conversion rate
Click-to-order or click-to-lead. Pinterest converts higher than most social platforms because Pinners come with intent (planning a wedding, decorating, shopping). 1.5 to 4 percent for ecom is realistic.
Win rate
Lead gen only. Share of Pinterest-sourced leads that close. Pinterest leads skew B2C-service (interior designers, wedding planners, course creators), not enterprise. Pull from CRM data.
Revenue per sale
Lead gen only. Pinterest works for B2C-service offers and creator-economy products: design services, wedding planning, online courses, anything where the buyer plans for weeks.
Average order value
Ecommerce only. Pinterest's bread and butter. Native to home, wedding, fashion, beauty, food, DIY. Higher AOV products thrive because Pinners save and consider rather than impulse-buy.
Best practices
Set 30-day attribution, not 7-day
Pinners save first and buy weeks later. A 7-day click window catches roughly half of Pinterest revenue and makes the channel look worse than it is.
Match Pin format to category
Promoted Pins for prospecting at scale, Idea Pins for storytelling, Shopping ads for catalog-driven sales. Mixing them in one campaign confuses bidding.
Lean into seasonality early
Pinterest searches for holidays, weddings, and back-to-school start 45 to 60 days before the event. Spend ahead of competitors, not alongside them.
Vertical 2:3 Pins outperform square
Pinterest's feed is built for tall images. Square or landscape Pins look cropped and underperform on click rate by 20 to 30 percent.
Re-run the math every quarter
Pinterest CPC and conversion rate move with seasonality and category trends. A budget set in January is rarely correct by April.
Built by the team behind SourceLoop
Guide
Most paid channels are click-and-buy. Pinterest is save-and-buy. Users save Pins to boards, come back days or weeks later, and eventually click through to purchase. The 30-day attribution window catches roughly 70 percent of Pinterest revenue, the 60-day window catches 85 percent or more. If your reporting is locked to a 7-day click view, half of Pinterest's value is invisible to you.
Same chain of multiplication as any channel:
orders_required = sales_goal / aov
clicks_required = orders_required / conversion_rate
budget = clicks_required * cpc Realistic ecom conversion rates on Pinterest sit between 1.5 and 4 percent for cold prospecting traffic, higher for retargeting and Shopping ads against your product feed. CPC runs $0.50 to $1.50 in most categories.
Pinterest works for products buyers plan for: home decor, weddings, fashion, beauty, food, gardening, DIY. It struggles with impulse purchases, transactional services, and B2B. The test is simple: does your customer search for ideas in the consideration phase, and is your category visual? If yes, Pinterest is in the running. If no, run on Meta or Google instead.
Three formats, three jobs. Promoted Pins (single image) are the workhorse for prospecting at scale. Idea Pins (multi-page, video-first) build audience and storytelling. Shopping ads plug into your product catalog and run direct-response. Most accounts run Promoted Pins as the bread-and-butter, layer in Shopping when AOV justifies catalog work, and use Idea Pins sparingly as creative fuel.
Pinterest's feed is tall. Square Pins (1:1) and landscape Pins (16:9) get cropped or look small. The recommended 2:3 aspect ratio (1000x1500) consistently outperforms square by 20 to 30 percent on click-through. If your existing creative is square or horizontal, plan production time to remake it before launching.
You sell home decor at $120 AOV. You want $100,000 in revenue from Pinterest next quarter. At $0.80 CPC and 2.5 percent conversion rate, the math says you need 833 orders, 33,333 clicks, and roughly $26,700 in spend, for a 3.7x ROAS. Strong for ecom. Now compress the attribution window to 7 days and you only see 50 percent of those orders, so the visible ROAS drops to 1.85x and the channel looks marginal. Same campaign, same revenue, very different optics. The 30-day window is the one to use for budgeting decisions.
FAQ
Plug in revenue goal, CPC, conversion rate, and AOV (or ACV and win rate). The calculator runs backward to clicks and spend, then shows three scenarios. Pinterest specifically benefits from a wider attribution window than other platforms, so consider 30 to 60 day data when setting your conversion rate.
Pinterest's auction is thinner (fewer advertisers) and the platform is still under-monetized relative to its audience size. Cheaper clicks do not always mean cheaper acquisition though, since intent at click time on Pinterest is exploratory, not buy-now. Where Pinterest wins is total cost per acquisition over a 30+ day window thanks to the save-then-buy behavior.
Pinners save Pins for weeks before they buy. The 30-day attribution window catches roughly 70 percent of Pinterest-sourced revenue. The 60-day window catches 85 to 90 percent. If your reporting is locked to 7-day click attribution, you are underestimating Pinterest performance by half. Configure your conversion windows accordingly.
Home decor, wedding, fashion, beauty, food, DIY, and craft are Pinterest's core. Health, parenting, and personal finance also work well. B2B, automotive, and insurance struggle. If your product photographs well and the buyer plans for it (rather than buying impulsively), Pinterest is in the running.
Promoted Pins (single image) for prospecting at scale. Idea Pins (multi-page video format) for storytelling and audience-building. Shopping ads for direct product catalog sales when you have a product feed. Most accounts run Promoted Pins as the bread-and-butter and add Shopping when AOV is high enough to justify catalog management.
Rarely for traditional enterprise B2B. Sometimes for B2C-services and creator-economy products: interior designers, wedding planners, online course creators, agencies serving creative industries. If your buyer is on Pinterest in the planning phase, the channel works. If they are not, it does not.
Yes. No signup, no email gate. We host it because the same teams planning a Pinterest Ads budget usually need real attribution to track which Pins actually move revenue across the long save-to-purchase window, which is what SourceLoop does.
Capture and send full attribution data from every signup, lead, booking, and sale to your CRM and ad platforms, so you know exactly what's driving revenue.
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