Budget — CBO vs ABO
CBO = single campaign budget, platform distributes across adsets. ABO = separate per-adset budget. Trade-offs depend on adset count + control needs.
Written By Salvatore Sinigaglia
Last updated About 1 hour ago
CBO = single campaign budget, platform distributes across adsets. ABO = separate per-adset budget. Trade-offs depend on adset count + control needs.
Budget — CBO vs ABO
CBO (Campaign Budget Optimization) = one budget at campaign level; the platform distributes spend across adsets dynamically based on performance. ABO (Ad Set Budget Optimization) = separate budget at adset level; you control distribution. Choose based on how much manual control you want vs platform-driven optimization.
Who is this for
Mediabuyers configuring budget structure in Express, Pro, or Bulk Launch. Anyone wondering "why does my budget get more aggressive on one adset and ignore the others".
The fundamental difference
CBO in detail
When you pick CBO:
- Set ONE budget at the campaign (e.g. $100/day)
- Platform decides how much each adset gets in real time
- High-performing adset gets more; low-performing gets less
- You can set per-adset minimum spend (Meta) to protect smaller adsets
- You can set per-adset bid cap to control unit economics
Use CBO when:
- 3-5 adsets with similar performance potential
- Trust the platform's auto-optimization
- Don't want to manage daily budget distribution manually
- Performing campaign with proven track record (platform has data to optimize)
Avoid CBO when:
- Specific adset MUST get a guaranteed spend (e.g. brand campaign with mandate)
- Testing very different audiences side-by-side and want apples-to-apples comparison
- One adset has dominant performance (CBO will starve others; sometimes you want manual diversification)
ABO in detail
When you pick ABO:
- Set budget on EACH adset (e.g. Adset A $30, Adset B $30, Adset C $40)
- Platform respects your per-adset budget
- Manual distribution gives predictability
- More setup time per launch
Use ABO when:
- Testing distinct audiences side-by-side (audience A vs B vs C)
- Need budget protection on specific adset (brand campaign with mandated reach)
- Smaller campaign budget where CBO would concentrate spend too much
- Just starting with the campaign (no platform learning yet)
Avoid ABO when:
- 10+ adsets (manual budget management painful at scale)
- Trust platform to optimize across adsets
- Adsets are similar (CBO will optimize for you)
Budget optimization in the DTO
Verified apps/backend/src/dto/request/bulk-launch.request.dto.ts budget_optimization field accepts:
The latter three are CBO with specific bid strategies layered on top.
Bid strategies (works with CBO)
Verified BidStrategy enum (canonical.enums.ts):
COST_CAP and MIN_ROAS require 30+ conversions in optimization window to learn (similar to Smart Bidding).
Decision tree
How many adsets?├─ 1 adset only → Either works (no diff in practice)├─ 2-5 adsets│ ├─ Similar audiences testing creative? → CBO│ └─ Distinct audiences testing? → ABO (fair comparison)├─ 6-10 adsets│ ├─ Trust platform optimization? → CBO + per-adset min spend│ └─ Need control? → ABO (with auto-budget tools)└─ 10+ adsets → CBO essential (manual ABO unmanageable)Switching between CBO and ABO mid-campaign
- CBO → ABO: Meta allows but resets learning. Don't do it in a winning campaign.
- ABO → CBO: also allowed; can take ~3-7 days to re-stabilize.
Best: pick CBO or ABO at launch + stick with it. If you want to change, pause + create new campaign.
In Wevion's launchers
Express mode
Budget step (4 of 6): pick budget type (CBO or ABO) + amount. Defaults to CBO.
Pro mode
In the campaign-level config (top of structure tree): CBO + amount. Or toggle to ABO → then per-adset budget field appears in each adset config.
Bulk Launch
budget_optimization column in the grid: pick CBO / ABO / BID CAP / COST CAP / MIN ROAS per row.
Budget interaction with bid strategy
Common mistakes
- CBO with very different audiences → one audience may dominate spend, starving the rest
- ABO with dozens of adsets → impossible to monitor per-adset; CBO is better
- CBO + BID CAP set too low → platform can't spend; budget goes unused
- COST_CAP with no conversion data → can't learn; switch to LOWEST_COST until conversions accumulate
What you'll see
Setting CBO:
- One budget field at campaign level
- All adsets show "Inherits from campaign budget"
Setting ABO:
- Campaign-level budget field hidden
- Per-adset budget field appears in each adset
Common questions
- "Which is cheaper?" Neither inherently. CBO often delivers slightly more conversions per dollar via auto-optimization. ABO gives more control.
- "Can I run BOTH CBO and ABO at the same time?" Across DIFFERENT campaigns, yes. Within ONE campaign, pick one.
- "What about Meta's Advantage+ campaigns?" Advantage+ defaults to CBO with heavy automation. Wevion supports.
- "Why won't my COST_CAP work?" Not enough conversion data. Wait until you have 30+ conversions/week before enabling.
FAQ
What's the difference between CBO and ABO in Wevion?
In Wevion, CBO (Campaign Budget Optimization) sets one budget at the campaign level and lets the platform distribute spend across ad sets dynamically based on performance. ABO (Ad Set Budget Optimization) sets a separate budget on each ad set, so you control the distribution. CBO means lower manual overhead and faster learning; ABO gives predictable per-ad-set spend.
When should I use CBO versus ABO?
Use CBO when you have three to five similar ad sets and trust the platform to optimize, or when you run ten-plus ad sets where manual budgeting is unmanageable. Choose ABO in Wevion when testing distinct audiences side-by-side for a fair comparison, protecting a specific ad set's spend, or launching a smaller-budget campaign.
Can I switch between CBO and ABO mid-campaign?
You can, but it resets learning. In Wevion, switching CBO to ABO restarts the platform's learning phase, and ABO to CBO can take three to seven days to re-stabilize — so avoid changing a winning campaign. Best practice is to pick CBO or ABO at launch and stick with it; to change, pause and create a new campaign.
What budget optimization values does Bulk Launch accept?
Wevion's Bulk Launch budget_optimization column accepts CBO (the default), ABO, BID CAP, COST CAP, and MIN ROAS. The last three are CBO with a specific bid strategy layered on top — bid cap for a maximum unit cost, cost cap for a target CPA, and min ROAS for a return threshold.
Why won't my COST_CAP bid strategy spend?
Your COST_CAP isn't spending because it lacks conversion data. In Wevion, the COST_CAP and MIN_ROAS bid strategies require roughly 30-plus conversions in the optimization window to learn, similar to Smart Bidding. Until you reach that volume, switch to LOWEST_COST_WITHOUT_CAP and let conversions accumulate first.
FAQ
What's the difference between CBO and ABO in Wevion?
In Wevion, CBO (Campaign Budget Optimization) sets one budget at the campaign level and lets the platform distribute spend across ad sets dynamically based on performance. ABO (Ad Set Budget Optimization) sets a separate budget on each ad set, so you control the distribution. CBO means lower manual overhead and faster learning; ABO gives predictable per-ad-set spend.
When should I use CBO versus ABO?
Use CBO when you have three to five similar ad sets and trust the platform to optimize, or when you run ten-plus ad sets where manual budgeting is unmanageable. Choose ABO in Wevion when testing distinct audiences side-by-side for a fair comparison, protecting a specific ad set's spend, or launching a smaller-budget campaign.
Can I switch between CBO and ABO mid-campaign?
You can, but it resets learning. In Wevion, switching CBO to ABO restarts the platform's learning phase, and ABO to CBO can take three to seven days to re-stabilize — so avoid changing a winning campaign. Best practice is to pick CBO or ABO at launch and stick with it; to change, pause and create a new campaign.
What budget optimization values does Bulk Launch accept?
Wevion's Bulk Launch budget_optimization column accepts CBO (the default), ABO, BID CAP, COST CAP, and MIN ROAS. The last three are CBO with a specific bid strategy layered on top — bid cap for a maximum unit cost, cost cap for a target CPA, and min ROAS for a return threshold.
Why won't my COST_CAP bid strategy spend?
Your COSTCAP isn't spending because it lacks conversion data. In Wevion, the COSTCAP and MINROAS bid strategies require roughly 30-plus conversions in the optimization window to learn, similar to Smart Bidding. Until you reach that volume, switch to LOWESTCOSTWITHOUTCAP and let conversions accumulate first.
Last updated: 2026-05-17