How do placement exclusions protect display ads?

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Scroll through a placement report for the first time and the list never ends. Game apps, coupon sites, foreign news pages you never heard of. Your banner ran on all of them last week while you assumed delivery stayed on safe news and hobby blogs.

Placement exclusions protect display ads by blocking specific websites, apps, and content categories from showing your creative. Without them, automatic display delivery spreads spend across inventory you never reviewed. Here is how exclusions work, what to block first, and how to keep lists current without killing reach.

What are placement exclusions for display ads?

A placement exclusion is a rule that prevents your display ad from running on a named site, app, channel, or content type. Exclusions operate at campaign level or account level. Account-level lists protect every display campaign from repeat offenders you find once.

Display protection uses two exclusion types together. Category exclusions block broad sensitive topics. Placement exclusions block individual domains and apps that reports flag as wasteful or off-brand. Category filters catch unknown sites. Blocklists remove known bad actors.

What placement exclusions protect against

Exclusions reduce brand safety risk by keeping ads off violent, adult, or politically extreme pages. They cut budget waste on made-for-advertising domains that generate clicks without buyers. They also limit bot-heavy apps that inflate impressions while real humans never see your offer.

How do you build effective display exclusion lists?

Start with strict content sensitivity settings before launch. Pull placement reports weekly during the first month. Exclude any domain or app with meaningful spend and zero on-site engagement. Add repeat offenders to an account-level blocklist so future campaigns inherit the protection.

Separate prospecting display from remarketing controls. Cold audience campaigns need tighter exclusions because unknown inventory carries more risk. Remarketing already targets people who visited your site, so placement quality matters but audience intent is higher.

Review mobile app placements separately from websites. Accidental in-app taps are common. Exclude apps with high click volume, sub-second session times, and no conversions. Sync blocklists with other modules so social and video campaigns share the same banned domains where possible.

Label blocklist entries with the date and campaign where you found each domain. That history helps you decide whether to keep an exclusion permanent or test removal after six months of clean data.

For display network setup details, read display network placement control. For cutting irrelevant domains, see excluding irrelevant websites and apps. Search account tools that share exclusion lists are covered in Google Ads protection tools you should use.

Frequently asked questions

Should I exclude all automatic display placements?

How many placements should I exclude before reach suffers?

Do placement exclusions stop click fraud on display ads?

Can I import a blocklist from another ad account?

What is the difference between topic exclusions and placement exclusions?

How often should I update display exclusion lists?