LSA Messaging Pricing Is Changing

Google just announced updates to Local Services Ads (LSA) messaging pricing, and the way they’re presenting it is interesting.

According to Google, when the same lead is sent to multiple businesses, advertisers may pay less. They also claim they’re improving their ability to detect low-quality leads upfront. There’s even a new banner at the top of lead reports that reads:

“Google can now detect more low-quality leads before they get charged. As a result, some users may notice fewer post-charge credits.”

Sounds great, right?

What this really means:

This is Google’s way of conditioning advertisers to expect fewer credits for bad leads not because the leads are suddenly better, but because Google is tightening up how (and when) they issue refunds.

The messaging tries to frame it as a win:
“We’re filtering more bad leads before they’re charged!”

But in practice, most advertisers know what this usually translates to:

  • Same number of low-quality leads

  • Fewer opportunities to dispute them

  • Fewer credits issued after submitted feedback forms

  • Higher overall cost per valid lead

Why legal marketers should pay attention

LSAs are already notorious for spam, wrong-number, and irrelevant service inquiries. Credits have been the one safety valve when quality dips. If Google is quietly reducing those? That directly impacts cost efficiency.

And let’s be honest: “may cost less” rarely means “will.”

Bottom line

This update feels less like improved lead quality and more like Google redefining what counts as refundable. Advertisers should keep a close eye on their LSA reports over the next few months and expect to fight a little harder for every credit.

We’re seeing what appears to be a new “Sale” extension showing up within LSAs. It’s not clear where this information is being sourced from.

Google just announced updates to Local Services Ads (LSA) messaging pricing, and the way they’re presenting it is interesting.

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