Categories: BLOG2

Account-Level Negative Keywords Now Available in Google Ads: What You Need to Know

While we’re all striving for different business and marketing goals with our PPC campaigns, we do all have one thing in common: to get the highest return on our investment. And there are a number of ways to facilitate that—one of which is through negative keywords.

And just recently, Google announced that account-level negative keywords are now available globally.

 

So what are they, what’s changing, and what does it mean? Read on to find out!

Quick refresher: What are negative keywords?

The PPC community includes advertisers of all levels, so before we dive into the announcement, let’s do a quick refresher on negative keywords. We do have a definitive guide to negative keywords which you are welcome to delve into, but we’ll cover the basics here:

When you create a Google Ads search campaign, you have to tell Google which keywords you are targeting/bidding on. These represent the queries that users type into the search bar that you want your ads to appear for. So if I’m selling box springs, I might target the keyword box spring and my ad might appear for queries like affordable box spring or box spring twin.

Conversely, negative keywords are the terms that you don’t want your ads to appear for. So if I only sell box springs, I might set mattresses as a negative keyword; or if the campaign is only for twin box springs, I’d want to add king box spring, queen box spring, etc. as negatives.

Image source

Negative keywords are important as they help your ads to appear only for the most relevant searches, which improves click-through rate and conversion rate and saves you from wasted spend.

💰 Are you wasting any spend in Google Ads?

Find out instantly the Free Google Ads Performance Grader!

What are account-level negative keywords?

You’ve always been able to create negative keyword lists for each of your campaigns. In account structure terms, this is called the “campaign level” and now, you can also set them at the account level. This means that if you have one term you want to set as a negative for all of your campaigns, instead of adding it to each individual negative keyword list in each campaign, you can just add it once at the account level and it will be applied across all campaigns.

What campaign types does it apply to?

When you set an account-level negative keyword, it will apply to all eligible search and shopping campaign types, which includes Search, Performance Max, Shopping, Smart Shopping, Smart, and Local campaigns (get a refresher on all Google Ads campaign types here).

In fact, negative keywords for Performance Max campaigns are account-level only, as noted by Jon Kagan in a recent #PPCChat:

Robert Brady responded saying this seems to encourage a second Google Ads account for PMax:

Julie Bacchini brought up the same idea in a separate thread, calling it “laughable” and ineffective.

A1.1:

I am not currently running any PMax campaigns in Google Ads, but their whole “we have solved brand terms” solution – letting you add account level brand negatives is laughable.

It neither addresses the issue advertisers have nor solves it.https://twitter.com/hashtag/PPCChat?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>#PPCChat

— Julie F Bacchini (@NeptuneMoon) https://twitter.com/NeptuneMoon/status/1620470621380526080?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>January 31, 2023

 

How to add account-level negative keywords

To add account level negative keywords in Google Ads, go to Account Settings > Negative keywords. Click the plus button and enter them in.

For more help with managing your keyword lists in Google Ads, here are some additional resources:

The post Account-Level Negative Keywords Now Available in Google Ads: What You Need to Know appeared first on WordStream.

If you liked Account-Level Negative Keywords Now Available in Google Ads: What You Need to Know by Kristen McCormick Then you'll love Miami SEO Expert

Kristen McCormick

Share
Published by
Kristen McCormick

Recent Posts

How To Make Your Brand Discoverable in AI Search

The second placement is a perfect illustration of how this works. Someone types "can you…

6 days ago

AI & Search Whiteboard Friday Rollup

I'm leaving you with one last resource, which was personally a delight to be part…

2 weeks ago

LLMs Are Not as Complex as You Think: Here Are 10 Strategies To Improve AI Visibility

Source: AI mode citation study by MozBrands need to invest in video content, whether that's working…

2 weeks ago

The Complete AI Research Workflow: From Prompt Discovery to Content Creation

Now that you’ve identified prompts that are important to your business, you can add them…

2 weeks ago

Travel Marketing: How to Compete and Future-Proof in 2026 — Whiteboard Friday

So how do you manage to stand out and land coverage in 2026? There are…

3 weeks ago

Brand Bias in Prompts: An Experiment

This experiment looked at three sets of prompts (100 each) — brand, “soft-brand”, and non-brand…

3 weeks ago