I’m watching Google update its advertising policy to make clearer how certain ads are limited while the company estimates a user’s age. The change gives advertisers more transparency as Google expands its age assurance technology worldwide.
What I’m seeing: Google has renamed its Default Ads Treatment policy to “Categories restricted while Google is estimating a user’s age.” To me, that wording matters because it makes the policy sound less like a permanent restriction and more like a temporary safeguard while Google’s systems work out whether a user is old enough to see certain types of ads.
What’s changing: I see three main updates here: the policy has a clearer name, the language now emphasizes that these protections are interim measures during the age estimation process, and enforcement remains unchanged.
What’s different: Google has also narrowed the list of ad categories restricted while a user’s age is being estimated. Previously, the restricted categories included adult content and pornography, alcohol, gambling, and shocking content.
Under the updated policy, I now see only three restricted categories: adult content and pornography, alcohol, and gambling. Shocking content no longer appears on that restricted list.
Why I care: This update does not introduce new advertising restrictions, but it does make the policy easier to understand. For advertisers in affected verticals, the key takeaway is that these limits are tied to Google’s age estimation process, not a broader or permanent policy shift.
The bottom line: I do not see any operational change for advertisers, but Google’s updated policy makes it much clearer that restrictions on adult, alcohol, and gambling ads are temporary safeguards while a user’s age is being estimated.
Inspired by this post on Search Engine Land.


Leave a Reply