To help you reach more potential customers, your ads will now show on content that matches any of the topics, placements, or Display/Video/Search keywords you target. For example, if you targeted “bikes” as a topic and “cycling” as a Display/Video/Search keyword, your ads will show on content that matches either.
You’ll also notice contextual targeting simplified into a single page in Google Ads, so you can manage all content targeting types (Topics, Placements, Display/Video keywords, and Exclusions) in a single view. The new page can be found in the “Content” section under Campaigns on the left-side navigation menu.
Negative keywords let you exclude search terms from your campaigns and help you focus on only the keywords that matter to your customers. Better targeting can put your ad in front of interested users and increase your return on investment (ROI).
This article explains how negative keywords work and when they might be useful.
Learn how to add negative keywords to campaigns
How they workOne key to a highly targeted campaign is choosing what not to target.
When selecting negative keywords for Search campaigns, look for search terms that are similar to your keywords, but might cater to customers searching for a different product. For example, if you're an optometrist who sells eyeglasses, you may want to add negative keywords for search terms like “wine glasses” and "drinking glasses".
Negative keywords won’t match to close variants or other expansions. For example, if you exclude the negative broad match keyword "flowers", ads won’t be eligible to serve when a user searches "red flowers", but can serve if a user searches for "red flower".
If you’re using Display or Video campaigns, negative keywords can help you avoid targeting unrelated sites or videos, but keep in mind that negative keywords work differently for Display and Video campaigns than they do for search. Depending on the other keywords in your ad group, some places where your ad appears may occasionally contain excluded terms. For Display and Video ads, a maximum of 1,000 negative keywords is considered at the account level.
Account-level negative keywordsWhen you create your account-level list of negative keywords, it will automatically apply to all eligible search and shopping inventory in relevant campaign types. This enables you to create a single, global, account-level list that applies negative keywords across all search and shopping inventory in your account. Learn more about account-level negative keywords
Types of negative keywordsFor Search campaigns, you can use broad match, phrase match, or exact match negative keywords. However, these negative match types work differently than their positive counterparts. The main difference is that you'll need to add synonyms and singular or plural versions if you want to exclude them. Negative keywords automatically account for casing and misspellings, so you don’t need to add those separately.
For Display campaigns, a set of negative keywords will be excluded as an exact topic. Ads won’t show on a page even if the exact keywords or phrases aren't on the page explicitly, but the topic of the content is strongly related to the excluded set of negative keywords.
For example, a set of negative keywords like "women’s pants" would block bidding on a page with content about women’s jeans, even if the exact phrase "women’s pants" didn't appear on the page. However, we wouldn't generalize beyond the concept of women’s pants to other kinds of women’s bottoms (for example, skirts) or men’s slacks. This is different from how we would treat a positive keyword, such as shoes, which we would also match to a broader category like footwear.
The rules below apply whether the negative keyword is one word or multiple words.
Negative broad matchThis type is the default for your negative keywords. For negative broad match keywords, your ad won't show if the search contains all your negative keyword terms, even if the terms are in a different order. Your ad may still show if the search contains only some of your keyword terms.
ExampleNegative broad match keyword: running shoes
Negative phrase matchFor negative phrase match keywords, your ad won't show if the search contains the exact keyword terms in the same order. The search may include additional words, but the ad won't show as long as all the keyword terms are included in the search in the same order. The search may also include additional characters to a word and the ad will show even when the rest of the keyword terms are included in the search in the same order.
ExampleNegative phrase match keyword: running shoes
Negative exact matchFor negative exact match keywords, your ad won't show if the search contains the exact keyword terms, in the same order, without extra words. Your ad may still show if the search contains the keyword terms with additional words.
ExampleNegative exact match keyword: running shoes
Symbols in negative keywordsYou can use 3 symbols in your negative keywords: ampersands (&), accent marks (á), and asterisks (*). Negative keywords with accent marks are considered 2 different negative keywords, like sidewalk cafe and sidewalk café. Similarly, “socks & shoes” is different from “socks and shoes”.
Here are some of the symbols that the system doesn't recognize:
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