Google uses conversion metadata to measure certain conversions that can't be measured via traditional methods. To support this, the gad_source
URL parameter is used to identify the source of ads URLs and improve the accuracy of ads conversion measurement. Any URL coming from a Google ad now has &gad_source
in its final URL. This parameter is used to identify the source of the ad click and isn’t customisable. All advertisers and campaigns with the same source will have the same gad_source
.
&gad_source
was formerly called &gad
. The gad_source
parameter will be gradually rolled out in the coming months. Some advertisers may not find the gad_source
parameter in their URLs yet.How it works
Google adds &gad_source
to the end of your final URL, before any fragments (also called 'name anchors' and indicated by the presence of a #
).
Example
example.com/foo?a=b&gad_source=1#xyz
If your website contains redirects, it's important that you keep the gad_source
URL parameter in your redirect. Google Ads and Analytics tags expect to observe the gad_source
parameter as top-level parameter on the page where tags are loaded.
Special cases
A small percentage of websites don't allow arbitrary URL parameters and serve an error page with these parameters. Consult with your webmaster to find out if this is the case, or you can perform a brief test to check if your website allows arbitrary parameters. If you get an error, you may need to ask your webmaster to allow gad_source
URL parameters.
To check if a &gad_source
URL parameter can be added to your landing page, follow these instructions:
- In your Google Ads account, click the Campaigns icon .
- Click the Insights and reports drop-down in the section menu.
- Click Landing pages.
- Copy the landing page URL from your Google Ads landing page and paste the URL into your browser.
- Add
&gad_source
URL parameter manually. - Press enter to go to that URL.
- Check if the parameter you entered is still present in the URL box and the page loads successfully.
Example
Let's say your landing page is: example.com/foo
Paste this into your URL box and add a test URL parameter (for example, 'bar'). Note that you need to prepend the parameter with a question mark (?
) if there are no preceding question marks in the URL:
example.com/foo?gad_source=1
If there is a preceding question mark, you need to prepend the parameter with an ampersand (&
):
example2.com/foo?page=123&gad_source=1
When you navigate to this URL, check and make sure that you find 'gad_source=1
' in the URL box. Note that your gad parameter is case-sensitive and should appear the same across all pages on your site.
If you have other URL parameters, the 'gad_source
' should come after those parameters but before any fragments (also called 'named anchors' and indicated by the presence of a #
). It should look something like this:
example.com/foo?a=b&gad_source=1#xyz
Note that the gad_source
parameter isn't controlled by auto-tagging as it’s not generated for your campaign specifically.