Provide seller information with Sellers.json

Discover and verify sellers and intermediaries

Sellers.json is an IAB provided standard to allow buyers to discover and verify the entities who are either direct sellers of or intermediaries in the selected digital advertising opportunity for purchase. This includes verifying publisher identities, including the name, domain name, and seller ID.

Google's sellers.json file provides a reliable way for buyers to identify direct inventory versus reseller inventory.

Seller.json fields

The sellers.json file, that Google hosts, includes a JSON object with the following fields:

Field Description
seller_id 16-digit publisher code, e.g. pub-1234567890123456
is_confidential When true, the name and domain fields are omitted.
seller_type

Seller is listed as one type: PUBLISHER or INTERMEDIARY or BOTH.

  • PUBLISHER: a seller who monetizes inventory which the seller owns, and is directly paid by Google.
  • INTERMEDIARY: a seller who monetizes inventory which the seller does not own or the seller is not paid directly by Google. For example, MCM parent publishers are intermediaries.
  • BOTH: a seller who monetizes both their own inventory and third-party inventory
name

Name of the seller entity.

This name can be found in Payments and then Payments info.

If you change your business name, this will result in an automatic payment delay of two weeks.

domain

Domain of seller entity.

If you're an INTERMEDIARY, this is the domain where your sellers.json file can be found.

Publisher transparency

An account with the seller type of PUBLISHER sells inventory directly on a site, app, or other medium and is directly paid by Google.

We encourage you to make your information transparent and publicly available by allowing your information to be listed in the sellers.json file to best help ad buyers verify your inventory. If this information is not made transparent, buyers will not be able to see your business name or business domain.

Opt in to have your information listed

First, your site must be verified by Google to add it to Sellers.json, unless you are a child publisher in Multiple Customer Management.

This setting is available for the seller type PUBLISHER. Intermediaries will automatically be set to transparent

  1. Sign in to Google Ad Manager.
  2. Click Admin and then Global Settings.
  3. Click Ad Exchange account settings.
  4. Select Enable next to "Sellers.json transparency".
  5. Add or edit your “Sellers.json business domain”.
  6. Click Save.

Please be aware that if you change your business name, this will result in an automatic payment delay of two weeks.

Your business name, business domain (if provided), and your publisher ID will appear in the Google sellers.json file. Some publishers may not be listed in sellers.json.

Example

The publisher Example Company Inc. has made their information transparent in the Google sellers.json file. This is what advertisers see:

"sellerId": "pub-1234567890123456",
"sellerType": "PUBLISHER",
"name": "Example Company Inc."
"domain": "example.com"

Your business domain

Your business domain is the domain for your corporate entity, not necessarily the domain where inventory is being monetized.

Your business domain name may be hidden in sellers.json until we have verified that you own the URL.

Note: If you don't have a web presence or your account is set to confidential, you do not need to provide a domain.

Use the root domain. Domain names should not include “www” or the scheme (namely, “https://” “http://”, or “ftp://”). Your domain should use a public suffix. Top-level domains should not include the preceding dot.

  Use case Example
Supported Domain name google.com and google.co.uk
Not supported Scheme https://google.com
Not supported Prefix and subdomains google.com and subdomain.google.com
Not supported Slash google.com/
Not supported Unsupported domain suffix google.ltd and google.tech

Multiple domains 

Publishers that represent and monetize multiple sites should have one seller-id, of their parent publisher choice, that represents that publisher entity in the sellers.json file. The seller-id represents the company that is being paid for their inventory, rather than representing each individual site. The domain for this entry should be a business/company domain of the child publisher, where ads can serve but are not required to.

Intermediary transparency

An account with a seller type of INTERMEDIARY sells inventory in Google Ad Manager which is not owned by the account or is not paid directly by Google. For example, Multiple Customer Management parent publishers would qualify as an intermediary.

Intermediaries and accounts with a seller type of BOTH will have is_confidential set to false by default.

Your information in Google’s sellers.json file

Review Google’s sellers.json file at realtimebidding.google.com/sellers.json.

If you have one or more accounts with AdSense, AdMob, or Ad Manager, you will appear in the sellers.json for each product. Your seller_id is unique to each product, but your transparency status and domain will be shared across all products. It’s not possible to be confidential for one product and transparent in another.

If you edit your business information for sellers.json in either AdSense, AdMob, or Ad Manager, your information will update across all products. For example, if you go into your AdSense account and activate Sellers.json transparency, this will automatically update your Ad Manager and AdMob accounts to also activate transparency.

Example

Example Company Inc. has accounts for AdMob (pub-9876543210123456), AdSense (pub-1122334455667788) , and Ad Manager (pub-1234567890123456).

Example Company Inc. activates transparency in their Ad Manager account (pub-1234567890123456). Example Company Inc.’s AdMob account and AdSense account will automatically be updated and set to transparent.

When Example Company Inc. updates the business domain to example.com in AdSense, their Ad Manager and AdMob accounts will automatically be updated to include the business domain example.com.

Find your information

  1. Download Google’s sellers.json file(right-click the link, and then click Save Link As).
  2. Open the downloaded sellers.json file.
  3. Use Ctrl + F (Command ⌘ + F, for Mac) to find your seller_id.
  4. Review your information.

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