Landing Page Conversion Calculator
Enter your traffic, conversion rate, and revenue per conversion to see conversions and revenue โ then model how much extra revenue a conversion-rate improvement would generate. Everything runs in your browser; nothing is uploaded.
๐ How it works & FAQWhy conversion rate is your cheapest growth lever
Most teams chase more traffic, but traffic costs money every single month. Improving your landing page conversion rate is different: fix the page once and every future visitor is worth more. This calculator makes that trade-off concrete. Multiply visitors by conversion rate and you get conversions; multiply conversions by revenue per conversion and you get revenue. Then it re-runs the same math with an improved conversion rate, so you can see exactly how many extra conversions & how much extra revenue a lift would produce โ before you spend a dollar on redesigns or A/B testing tools.
Relative lift vs percentage points
The improvement field works two ways, because marketers quote lifts both ways. A relative lift of 20% takes a 2.5% conversion rate to 3.0% (2.5 × 1.2). A percentage-point improvement of 2 takes that same 2.5% rate to 4.5%. Relative lift is how A/B test results are usually reported; points are how people talk about goals. Pick whichever matches your situation โ the revenue impact updates live either way. These figures are estimates only, not professional or financial advice; real results vary with traffic quality, seasonality, and offer.
How to use it
- Enter your monthly visitors โ sessions or unique visitors, as long as your conversion rate uses the same base.
- Enter your current conversion rate as a percentage (2.5 means 2.5%).
- Enter revenue per conversion: average order value, lead value, or signup value.
- Set the improvement you want to model and choose relative lift or percentage points.
- Read the results row: current conversions and revenue, the improved rate, and the extra revenue the lift is worth.
FAQ
- What is a good landing page conversion rate?
- Medians hover around 2–5% for most industries, but top pages reach 10%+. Your own baseline matters more than benchmarks โ measure it, then improve it.
- What should I use for revenue per conversion?
- For e-commerce, average order value. For lead generation, multiply your close rate by average deal size to get a per-lead value.
- Is a 20% lift realistic?
- Yes, for underperforming pages โ clearer headlines, stronger offers, and shorter forms routinely move rates 10–30%. Mature, already-optimized pages see smaller gains.
- Does this tool send my numbers anywhere?
- No. All calculations run entirely in your browser; nothing is stored or transmitted.