Google Ads determines which ads should show with a lightning-fast ad auction, that takes place every time someone searches on Google or visits a site that shows ads.
There are 6 main factors in the ad auction that determine which ads appear, and in what order:
- Your bid: When you set your bid, you're telling Google Ads the maximum amount you're willing to pay for a click on your ad. How much you actually end up paying is often less, and you can change your bid at any time.
- The quality of your ads and landing page - Google Ads aims to provide users with high quality results by assessing several factors, including the usefulness and relevance of your ad and landing page, the expectations users have about your landing page based on the clicked ad creative, ease of landing page navigation, as well as other Search Quality signals.
Our assessment of the quality of your ad is summarized in your Quality Score, which you can monitor in your Google Ads account.
- The expected impact from your ad assets and other ad formats: When you create your ad, you've the option to add additional information to your ad, such as a phone number, or more links to specific pages on your site. These additions are called ad assets. Google Ads estimates how assets and other ad formats you use will impact your ad's performance. So even if your competition has higher bids, you can still win a higher position at a lower price by using highly relevant keywords, ads, and assets.
- Your Ad Rank thresholds: To help ensure high-quality ads, we set minimum quality thresholds that an ad must achieve in order to show in a particular ad position.
- The context of your ad: With the ad auction, context matters. When calculating Ad Rank, we look at the search terms the person has entered, the person’s location at the time of the search, the type of device they’re using (for example, mobile or desktop), the time of the search, the nature of the search terms, other ads and search results that show on the page, and other user signals and attributes.
- The competitiveness of an auction - If two ads competing for the same position have similar ad ranks, each will have a similar opportunity to win that position. As the gap in ad rank between two advertisers’ ads grows, the higher-ranking ad will be more likely to win but also may pay a higher cost per click for the benefit of the increased certainty of winning.
Together, these 6 factors determine when and if your ad will appear to potential customers.
Learn more about how adjusting your keyword bids can help you create a cost-effective campaign.
Note: If multiple keywords from the same account are eligible to match the same search term, they don't compete with each other in the auction. Learn more about similar keywords in a Google Ads account
Sign up for a Google Ads account today and follow along with this guide.