Understand the Google Publisher Policies and Google Publisher Restrictions

Google helps to support a free and open internet by helping publishers monetize their content and advertisers reach prospective customers with useful, relevant products and services. Maintaining trust in the ads ecosystem requires setting limits on what we will monetize.

All publishers are required to adhere to our policies, so please read them carefully. If you fail to comply with these policies, we reserve the right to deactivate ad serving on your site or deactivate your account at any time. If your account is deactivated, you will not be eligible for further participation in the Google Ad Manager program.

In accordance with our online Terms and Conditions, it's your responsibility to keep up to date with, and adhere to, the policies posted here.

Google Publisher Policies and Restrictions Explained

In this article:

What are Google Publisher Policies?

When you monetize your content with Google ad code, you’re required to adhere to the Google Publisher Policies. By content we mean anything present on your page or app—including user generated content like comment sections, other advertisements and links to other sites or apps. Attempting to monetize policy-violating content and failure to comply with these policies may result in Google blocking ads from appearing against your content, or your account being suspended or terminated.

These policies apply in addition to any other policies governing your use of Google publisher products.

What are Google Publisher Restrictions?

Google Publisher Restrictions identify content that is restricted from receiving certain sources of advertising. By content, we mean anything present on your page or app—including other advertisements and links to other sites or apps.

Monetizing content that falls under the Google Publisher Restrictions is not a policy violation; instead, we restrict advertising on that content as appropriate, based on the preferences of each advertising product or advertisers’ individual preferences. Sometimes this will mean that no advertising sources are bidding on your inventory and no ads will appear on this restricted content.

We have buyers from multiple sources, which can include Google Ads, Authorized Buyers, DV360, Reservations, and others. So you may receive limited ads from some of these other sources but note that Google Ads (formerly AdWords) ads will not serve on content labeled with these restrictions.

So while you can choose to monetize content covered by the Google Publisher Restrictions, doing so will mean you’ll likely receive less advertising on this restricted content than you would receive on other, non-restricted content.

These restrictions apply in addition to any other policies governing your use of Google publisher products.

What is the difference between Google Publisher Policies and Google Publisher Restrictions?

Google Publisher Policies outline the types of content we won’t monetize through any of our publisher products. These include policies against illegal content, dangerous or derogatory content, and sexually explicit content, among others. This is content that will never be allowed to show ads.

Google Publisher Restrictions, by contrast, outline the types of content, such as Tobacco or Recreational Drugs, that don’t necessarily violate policy but that may not be appealing for all advertisers. This means publishers will not receive policy violations but instead the content will be labeled with an inventory restriction and will likely receive less advertising, or sometimes no advertising, as the advertisers determine the demand.

Where can I see issues that may affect ad serving?

The Policy center displays all of the current enforcements on your sites. Enforcements can either block all advertising (for example, "Ad serving disabled") or restrict which advertisers can bid on your inventory (for example, "Restricted demand").

You may receive enforcements due to various issues with your content:

  • Google Publisher Policy must be fixed. Policy violations are enforced with either "Ad serving disabled" or "Restricted demand".
  • Google Publisher Restrictions are not policy violations so you don't need to change your content or ad requests. However, content with publisher restrictions receives "Restricted demand".
Tip: To find out if you need to take action on an enforcement, review the "Must fix" column in your Policy center. The column will say "Yes" if an enforcement is due to a policy violation. It will say "No" for publisher restrictions.

How to resolve a Google Publisher Policy violation?

  1. Access the Policy center, which gives you detailed information about issues that may restrict ads from appearing on your sites, site sections, pages or apps, and the steps to resolve issues with ad serving and request reviews after you've made changes. The main page of the Policy center provides an overview of your affected sites.
  2. If the "Must fix" column says "Yes", one of your sites, site sections or pages is not currently in compliance with Program policies and in this case Google Publisher Policies, as a result, an enforcement has been taken. When the action is taken on a page, then the page is violating policy. When the action is taken on a site or site section, then there are multiple pages within the site or site section that are violating policy. When this occurs, you need to check your entire site or site section and make changes to bring it into compliance with our policies.
  3. After you address the policy violations on your site, site section, or pages, you may request a review.

How to resolve Google Publisher Restrictions?

  1. Access the Policy center, which gives you detailed information about issues that may restrict ads from appearing on your sites, site sections or pages, as well as the steps to resolve issues with ad serving and request reviews after you've made changes.
  2. If the "Must fix" column says "No", it means that your site has content that falls under the Google Publisher Restrictions. While you can choose to monetize this type of content, you’ll likely receive reduced advertising as not all ad sources will be able to bid on it.
  3. If you address any of the publisher restrictions on your site, site section, or pages, you may request a review.

Stay up to date on our content requirements

To help publishers stay up to date on our content criteria for monetization, we sometimes reshare existing guidance, particularly when we see worrisome trends or areas of potential confusion. Learn more about existing guidance

Google Publisher Policies and Google Publisher Restrictions FAQs

Here are the answers to some frequently asked questions about Google Publisher Policies and Google Publisher Restrictions:

I have received Policy Restrictions and the Policy center shows it’s not a "Must fix" issue, what does this mean?

If the "Must fix" column says "No", it means that your site has content that falls under the Google Publisher Restrictions. We have buyers from multiple sources, which can include Google Ads, Authorized Buyers, DV360, Reservations, and others. So while you can choose to monetize this type of content, you may receive limited ads from some of these other sources but note that Google Ads (formerly AdWords) ads will not serve on content labeled with these restrictions.

If I want to continue serving ads on the restricted (Policy Restrictions) page, will my account be at risk of getting suspended or terminated?

Monetizing content that falls under the Google Publisher Restrictions will not be a policy violation; instead, we’ll restrict advertising on that content as outlined above. So while you can choose to monetize content covered by the Google Publisher Restrictions, doing so will mean you’ll likely receive less advertising revenue on restricted content than you would receive on other, fully compliant content.

Why would advertisers choose not to advertise on my page with content violating Google Publisher Restrictions?

We understand that advertisers may not find the types of content listed under Google Publisher Restrictions to be appealing, or a good association with their brand, which is why we let them decide. Our advertisers have various categories that they can choose from, and not all will opt into sensitive categories. Therefore, the end result is that content labeled as a restriction may receive limited, or no monetization, however it’s not a policy violation.

I’ve removed my content after receiving the page level enforcement and requested a review. Now I’ve received a new "no content" policy violation. What are the recommended actions to fix the violations?

Everything we do is designed to protect our publishers, our users and our advertisers. Where you choose to remove non-compliant content on pages, you should also remove any related ad code from that page so that ads are not served next to a blank space.

We understand that it may be an effort on your end to determine if any pages of your site are in violation of policies, but we're also responsible to our advertisers and users, and in order to keep them confident in the ecosystem, we must uphold our policies.

To be perfectly clear, we are not censoring publishers content through the removal of any content on their sites. We simply request the removal of our ad code on non-compliant pages.

Can I hide/remove the restrictions that I do not want to fix? I don’t want to keep seeing the old restrictions or new restrictions on certain pages.

You can use the filter and download options in the Policy center to help you find and manage policy violations and publisher restrictions:

  • Click filter to only see certain sites, site status, or to only see certain enforcement dates.
  • Click download Download to download a CSV file of all pages or sections with violations for all sites or individual sites.

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