For mortgage ads, the better choice depends on your goals—volume vs. lead quality—but here's a professional breakdown to guide your decision:
Use Facebook Lead Forms If:
You want high lead volume at a lower cost
You're targeting a cold or broad audience
You’re in the testing phase and want quick data
Pros:
Cons:
Leads are often lower quality
Limited pre-qualification (harder to filter serious buyers)
Limited customization for messaging or branding
Use a Dedicated Landing Page If:
You want higher intent, more qualified leads
You need to pre-screen based on loan type, credit score, or budget
You're running long-term or high-investment campaigns
Pros:
Full control over content, layout, and branding
More space to build trust (testimonials, calculators, FAQs)
Easier to integrate with CRMs and analytics
Cons:
My Recommendation:
Start with Facebook forms if you need fast data and low entry barriers. Once you identify what messaging or audience converts best, shift to a landing page to improve quality and scale serious inquiries.
Many mortgage marketers use both—Facebook forms for cold leads, landing pages for retargeting or higher intent segments.