Google provides translated versions of our Help Centre, although they are not meant to change the content of our policies. The English version is the official language that we use to enforce our policies. To view this article in a different language, use the language drop-down at the bottom of the page.
As noted in our advertising Terms and Conditions, Google reserves the right to refuse ads or suspend ad accounts when necessary. To help ensure a safe and positive experience for users, Google requires that advertisers comply with Google Ads policies. We take repeat violations of our policies seriously and take action against advertisers for non-compliance.
We use a combination of automated and human evaluation to detect and remove ads which violate our policies and are harmful to users and the overall Google Ads ecosystem. Our enforcement technologies may use algorithms and machine learning, modelled on human reviewers’ decisions, to help protect our users and keep our ad platforms safe. The policy-violating content is either removed by our automated models or, where a more nuanced determination is required, it is flagged for further review by trained operators and analysts who conduct content evaluations that might be difficult for algorithms to perform alone, for example because an understanding of the context of the ad is required. The results of these manual reviews are then used to help build training data to further improve our machine learning models.
We take action on ads that violate our policies. This may include disapproving ads so that they don’t serve, as well as suspending accounts for repeat or egregious violations. We take repeat violations of our policies seriously and continue to expand a strike system for repeat offenders.
Strikes are issued to your Google Ads account when you repeatedly violate certain Google Ads policies. Note that no strikes are issued for the first policy violation. You'll be able to receive a maximum of three strikes, and the penalties applied with each strike will progressively increase. Temporary account holds will be applied for the first and second strikes (for three and seven days respectively), while the third strike will result in an account suspension.
What happens if you get a strike
A strike is issued to your Google Ads account via an email and an in-account notification when your assets or ads violate a Google Ads policy multiple times. An account can receive a maximum of one warning and three strikes per policy violation.
Warning
First strike
Second strike
Third strike
What to do if you get a strike
Your account may be in a temporary hold state or suspended. The temporary hold state or suspension is determined by the number of strikes accumulated in your account for a given policy.