Why Your Google Ads Campaigns Aren’t Spending

Google Ads Strategy Darren Talyor 24th February 2026

Why Your Google Ads Campaign Isn’t Spending (And How to Fix It)

One of the most frustrating problems in Google Ads is launching a campaign, increasing budgets, adjusting settings, and still seeing little to no spend. Whether your campaign is spending nothing at all or only delivering a handful of impressions, the issue usually comes down to either a status problem or a restrictive setup.

The good news is that Google absolutely wants to spend your budget. If it isn’t doing so, something in the account is preventing the system from entering auctions confidently.

In this guide, we’ll break down the most common reasons Google Ads campaigns fail to spend and explain exactly how to fix them.


Start With the Obvious: Payment Issues

Before analysing campaign settings, make sure your billing setup is working correctly.

Google Ads requires a valid payment method before ads can run. If there’s an issue with billing, your campaigns will stop serving entirely.

Common billing problems include:

  • Expired credit cards
  • Failed bank authorisations
  • Missing billing profiles
  • Prepaid balances running out
  • Payment thresholds not being met

If Google cannot process payment, your ads will not run regardless of how well the campaigns are configured.

This applies to both:

  • Postpay billing accounts
  • Prepay billing accounts

Always check the billing section first before troubleshooting anything else.


Check Your Ad Status

Once billing is confirmed, the next step is reviewing ad approval statuses.

Inside Google Ads, look at the status column for your ads.

Eligible Ads

If your ads are marked as Eligible, that’s a positive sign. Your ads can serve normally.

Eligible (Limited)

Some industries naturally receive a limited status due to policy restrictions.

Examples include:

  • Healthcare
  • Locksmith services
  • Garage door repair services in the US

In these industries, advertisers often need verification before ads can run. Even after approval, the status may still show as “Eligible (Limited)”.

If you’re receiving impressions, this usually isn’t a problem.

Disapproved Ads

If your ads are disapproved, they cannot serve at all.

Common disapproval reasons include:

  • Trademark violations
  • Excessive punctuation or symbols
  • Misleading claims
  • Destination URL errors
  • Broken landing pages
  • Policy violations

Even something as simple as a 404 error on your landing page can stop ads from running.

If your campaigns have no impressions whatsoever, disapproved ads are one of the first things to investigate.


Budget Restrictions Can Prevent Spend

One of the most common causes of underspending is simply setting the budget too low.

Google’s auction system needs enough budget flexibility to compete effectively. If your daily budget is unrealistically small compared to average click costs, Google may barely participate in auctions.

Example

Imagine your industry averages:

  • £10–£15 CPCs

But your campaign budget is:

  • £5 per day

Google recognises it cannot compete consistently with that budget level and may dramatically limit delivery.

Even budgets slightly above average CPCs can still create issues.

For example:

  • £30/day budget
  • £15 average CPC

This may still be too restrictive for Google to gather enough data and compete aggressively.

The Solution

Give campaigns enough room to operate.

A healthy budget should allow:

  • Multiple clicks per day
  • Data collection
  • Auction flexibility
  • Learning opportunities

Low budgets create hesitation within Google’s bidding system.


Your Bidding Strategy May Be Too Restrictive

Bidding settings heavily influence spend levels.

Manual CPC Problems

If you use Manual CPC and bids are consistently below first-page bid estimates, visibility will suffer.

Low bids lead to:

  • Poor ad rank
  • Minimal impressions
  • Very limited traffic

While you may still get occasional clicks, campaigns often struggle to scale.


Smart Bidding Can Also Restrict Delivery

Smart bidding strategies can become overly restrictive if targets are unrealistic.

This commonly happens with:

  • Target CPA
  • Target ROAS

Target CPA Issues

If your CPA target is too low, Google may stop bidding aggressively because it believes conversions cannot be achieved profitably.

Example

  • Average CPC = £30
  • Target CPA = £30

This leaves virtually no room for conversion inefficiency.

Google may decide the target is unrealistic and severely reduce spend.

Target ROAS Issues

The same applies to ROAS targets.

If your ROAS expectations are set too high too early, especially with limited data, campaigns may restrict themselves dramatically.

Google’s automation requires realistic targets and enough historical data to optimise effectively.


Geographic Targeting May Be Too Narrow

Local businesses frequently encounter spending problems caused by overly restrictive targeting.

If your geographic area is too small, there simply may not be enough search demand.

For example:

  • Small radius targeting
  • Tiny postcode selections
  • Very limited service areas

If insufficient people are searching within that location, Google cannot generate impressions consistently.

Niche Industries Face Additional Challenges

Businesses operating in highly specialised industries may naturally have low search volume.

Examples include:

  • Specialist industrial services
  • Rare B2B solutions
  • Highly technical local services

In these cases, lower spend may simply reflect limited market demand.

However, for most common industries, geographic restrictions are often unnecessarily tight.


Your Keyword Strategy Could Be Too Restrictive

Keywords play a major role in campaign delivery.

Exact Match Limitations

Exact match is the most restrictive match type.

While close variants help broaden reach slightly, exact match campaigns can still suffer from limited volume if keyword coverage is too narrow.

If campaigns aren’t spending, ask yourself:

  • Do you have enough keyword variation?
  • Are all services represented?
  • Are you targeting enough search intent?

Sometimes the solution is simply expanding keyword coverage.


Broad Match Rarely Has Spending Problems

Broad match generally creates the opposite issue.

Google expands aggressively from broad match keywords, often generating large amounts of traffic.

If you’re struggling to spend while using broad match, the issue likely lies elsewhere.


Negative Keywords Can Over-Restrict Campaigns

Another overlooked issue is excessive use of negative keywords.

Many advertisers aggressively add negatives without enough data, unintentionally blocking valuable traffic.

Be Conservative With Negatives

Not every unusual search term is bad.

Search behaviour is often unpredictable, and some search terms that initially look irrelevant can still convert later.

Instead of instantly blocking borderline queries:

  • Wait for sufficient data
  • Evaluate performance trends
  • Remove only clearly irrelevant traffic

Overusing negative keywords can slowly choke campaign reach and reduce spend significantly.


Conversion Tracking Problems Can Kill Spend

Conversion tracking issues are one of the most damaging causes of underspending.

This is especially true for campaigns using smart bidding.

What Happens When Tracking Breaks?

If conversion tracking stops working:

  • Google receives less conversion data
  • Smart bidding loses optimisation signals
  • Performance declines
  • Spend gradually decreases

Eventually, campaigns can stop spending almost entirely.

Common Causes of Broken Tracking

These include:

  • Website updates
  • Google Tag Manager errors
  • Tracking code removals
  • Incorrect conversion settings
  • CMS changes

If spend suddenly drops after stable performance, conversion tracking should be checked immediately.


Brand New Accounts Often Struggle With Smart Bidding

Many advertisers launch new campaigns directly on:

  • Maximise Conversions
  • Target CPA

This often causes delivery problems.

Why?

Because Google has no conversion history yet.

Without data, Google doesn’t know how to optimise effectively.

As a result, campaigns may barely spend.


Better Strategy for New Campaigns

For new accounts, start with:

  • Manual CPC
  • Maximise Clicks

These strategies help generate:

  • Traffic
  • Search term data
  • Conversion history

Once sufficient conversions accumulate, transition into:

  • Maximise Conversions
  • Target CPA

This creates a much smoother learning process for Google’s algorithms.


Don’t Forget About Seasonality

Some businesses naturally experience periods of low demand.

If you operate in a seasonal industry, reduced spend during off-peak periods may be completely normal.

Examples include:

  • Landscaping
  • Holiday services
  • Seasonal retail
  • Outdoor industries

Always compare performance against historical seasonal trends before assuming something is broken.


Give New Campaigns Time to Learn

Finally, avoid panicking too early.

Brand new campaigns often take time before spending ramps up properly.

Google’s systems may require:

  • 24–72 hours for review
  • Learning phase adjustments
  • Initial auction testing

It’s common for fresh campaigns to start slowly.

Before making major changes:

  • Wait at least 48 hours
  • Monitor impressions carefully
  • Avoid constant edits during launch

Premature optimisation can sometimes create more problems than it solves.


Final Thoughts

If your Google Ads campaigns aren’t spending, the issue almost always falls into one of two categories:

  1. A status problem
  2. An overly restrictive setup

The most common causes include:

  • Billing problems
  • Disapproved ads
  • Tiny budgets
  • Unrealistic bidding targets
  • Narrow targeting
  • Over-restrictive keywords
  • Excessive negative keywords
  • Broken conversion tracking

The key is diagnosing the restriction point and removing unnecessary limitations while still maintaining control over campaign quality.

Google wants to participate in auctions and spend your budget — but your account setup needs to give the system enough flexibility to do so effectively.

About The Speaker

Darren Talyor

Editor

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