Google ads business operations verification

Google Ads Business Operations Verification 2026: Step-by-Step Approval Guide

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Google Ads has become very strict when it comes to advertiser transparency, business identity, account ownership, and business operations. If you are running ads, there is a high chance that sooner or later Google may ask you to complete Advertiser Verification or Business Operations Verification.

A lot of advertisers get confused between both of them.

Some people receive a basic Advertiser Verification request, where Google wants to confirm who is running the ads. Others receive Business Operations Verification, where Google wants to understand your business model, website, customers, services, documents, licenses, and who is actually managing the campaigns.

In this article, I’m going to explain how we completed a Google Ads Business Operations Verification for one of our own company accounts and got it approved.

This is based on a real verification case where we submitted the business details, website information, company license, Google Partner proof, privacy policy, business model, and other required information.

Table of Contents

What is Google Ads Business Operations Verification?

Google Ads Business Operations Verification is a process where Google asks advertisers to explain how their business works.

Google may ask questions such as:

  • What business do you run?
  • What website is connected with this Google Ads account?
  • Do you run ads for your own business or for clients?
  • Who creates the ad content?
  • Who creates website content?
  • Who pays for the Google Ads account?
  • What services or products are promoted?
  • How do customers receive the goods or services?
  • Are any licenses or certifications required?
  • How do you protect customer information?

In simple words, Google wants to know whether your business is genuine, transparent, and compliant with Google Ads policies.

Advertiser Verification vs Business Operations Verification

Usually, advertisers receive two major types of verification issues:

1. Advertiser Verification

This is where Google verifies the advertiser identity. It may ask for business name, personal identity, company documents, location, and related details.

2. Business Operations Verification

This goes deeper. Google wants to understand how your business operates. In our case, the basic advertiser verification was already completed, but the account still had a second task pending: Business Operations Verification.

This is the part where many advertisers make mistakes because they select the wrong business type or provide unclear answers.

Why Google Requests Business Operations Verification

Google asks for business operations details to protect users and maintain trust in its advertising platform.

If Google does not understand your business clearly, your account may face limited serving, verification warnings, or even suspension.

Some common reasons include:

  • Google wants to verify your business model.
  • Your website or business category needs more clarification.
  • You are running ads for clients.
  • You are offering marketing, lead generation, or digital services.
  • Your account has incomplete advertiser information.
  • Google wants to confirm who is responsible for the ads.
  • Your website lacks transparency, privacy policy, or contact information.

If you fail to complete advertiser verification, your account can eventually be suspended or paused, which is why this process should not be ignored. AliRaza.co already covers advertiser verification as one of the important suspension-related issues in Google Ads.

When Should You Complete It?

In the case shown in the video, Google mentioned that the verification usually needs to be completed within 30 days of the first notification.

So if you receive this message inside your Google Ads account, do not delay it.

Many advertisers keep postponing the task because they are unsure what to write. But if you wait too long, your ads may stop running or the account may go into a restricted status.

Step-by-Step: How We Completed Google Ads Business Operations Verification

Now let’s go through the actual process.

Step 1: Start the Verification Task

Inside the Google Ads account, you may see a notification asking you to complete advertiser verification or restart advertiser verification.

Once you click on Start, Google will show the pending tasks.

In our case, the basic advertiser verification task was already completed, but Business Operations Verification was still pending.

Step 2: Confirm the Website

Google asked for the website connected with the ads account.

We added our company website because the Google Ads account belonged to our own company.

You should always add the correct website that is actually being used with your ads account. Do not submit an unrelated website, expired domain, or a website that does not clearly represent your business.

Step 3: Confirm Whether the Website Is Still Used

Google asked whether the website is still used with the ads account.

We selected Yes, because the same company website was still being used for the account.

This is important because Google wants to connect your ads, website, business name, and verification details together.

Step 4: Choose How You Use Google Ads

This is one of the most confusing parts.

Google may ask which option best reflects your use of Google Ads. Options may include things like:

  • I run ads for the organization I work for.
  • I run ads for another organization.
  • I run ads for an individual.
  • I run ads for my own registered business.

In our case, we selected the option that reflected our own registered business because the account belonged to our company.

You need to be careful here. If you are an agency running ads for clients, your answer may be different from a business running ads only for itself.

Step 5: Add Business Name and Location

Since our company is based in the UAE, we added the business name and selected the United Arab Emirates as the target location.

You should make sure the business name matches your official documents, website, billing profile, and any supporting information you upload.

Mismatch in business name, address, or location may cause delays or rejection.

Step 6: Upload Business Documents

Google asked for company documentation.

We uploaded the company’s commercial license details. In the video, it was mentioned that the company license was valid until 2027.

Depending on your business and country, Google may ask for different types of documents, such as:

  • Business registration certificate
  • Commercial license
  • Trade license
  • Tax document
  • Government-issued business document
  • Professional license, if applicable

Make sure the document is clear, valid, and matches your business information.

Step 7: Add Company Address and Email

Google asked for business contact details.

We added the company address from the website footer and used the email address connected with the account.

This is another important point. Your website should have a proper business address, contact information, privacy policy, and terms page.

A missing About Us, Contact Us, Privacy Policy, or Terms page can make the website look untrustworthy, and that may create problems in Google Ads approval or suspension cases.

Step 8: Describe the Company Type

Google asked us to describe the company’s type of business.

Since we are a full-fledged digital marketing company, we explained that we help clients manage:

  • Google Ads
  • Meta Ads
  • TikTok Ads
  • SEO
  • Other digital marketing services

In your case, write a simple and honest explanation of what your company does.

For example:

We are a digital marketing agency that helps businesses run Google Ads, Meta Ads, SEO, and other online advertising campaigns.

Avoid exaggerated claims. Keep it clear and accurate.

Step 9: Explain the Business Model

Google asked us to describe the company business model.

We explained that we run ads for ourselves and for clients on Google Ads, Meta, TikTok, and other platforms.

This is important because Google wants to know whether you are:

  • Selling your own products
  • Providing services
  • Running ads for clients
  • Acting as an agency
  • Working as a reseller
  • Generating leads
  • Promoting third-party offers

Be transparent.

If you are an agency, say you are an agency. If you run ads for your own company only, mention that clearly.

Step 10: Describe the Target Audience

Google asked who the customers or target audience are.

We explained that our target audience is businesses looking to advertise online.

A good answer could be:

Our target audience is businesses and companies that want to advertise online and generate leads or sales through paid advertising and digital marketing services.

Step 11: Explain How Customers Interact With the Company

Google asked how the company interacts with its customers.

We mentioned customer support channels such as:

  • WhatsApp
  • Email
  • Online communication

This helps Google understand how customers contact your business and receive support.

Make sure your website also supports this answer. If you mention email and WhatsApp, your website should ideally show contact details or a contact form.

Step 12: Select the Correct Business Type

This was one of the most important parts of the verification.

Google showed different business type options, such as:

  • First-party business
  • Online sales portal
  • Brand reseller
  • Marketing and advertising agency
  • Direct affiliate
  • Member of marketing agency with negotiated contracts

At first, there was some confusion, but finally we selected Marketing and Advertising Agency because that accurately described our company.

This is where many advertisers make a mistake.

If you are an agency, do not select first-party seller unless you are actually selling your own product or service directly as the main advertiser.

If you provide advertising services to clients, select the option that honestly matches your role.

Step 13: Upload Google Partner Proof

Because we are a Google Partner company, we also uploaded Google Partner proof as supporting evidence.

This can help Google understand your business credibility, especially if you are offering Google Ads management or paid marketing services.

If you have certifications, partner badges, licenses, or relevant proof, upload them where applicable.

Step 14: Answer Paid Marketing and Lead Generation Questions

Google asked whether the company provides paid marketing, paid retargeting, or paid lead generation services.

Since we provide these services, we answered yes.

Again, this is about being accurate. If your company provides paid advertising services, do not hide it.

Step 15: Explain How Customers Receive the Service

Google asked how the target audience receives the goods or services promoted in the ads.

Since digital marketing management is not a physical product, we explained that it is a non-tangible service. It is delivered as management and consultation services.

A good answer could be:

Our services are digital and non-tangible. Customers receive campaign management, consultation, reporting, and advertising services online through email, WhatsApp, and scheduled communication.

This helps Google understand that you are not shipping a physical product.

Step 16: Who Creates the Ad Content?

Google asked who creates the ad content for the account.

We answered that we create our own ad content.

If you use a third party, freelancer, client team, or agency, answer accordingly.

Step 17: Who Creates Website Content?

Google asked who creates the website content.

We answered that we create our own website content.

This matters because Google wants to know who is responsible for the claims, offers, landing pages, and content shown to users.

Step 18: Who Is Responsible for Fulfillment?

Google asked who customers should contact or who is responsible for fulfillment.

We answered that our company is responsible.

For service businesses, fulfillment may mean:

  • Providing consultation
  • Managing campaigns
  • Sending reports
  • Giving support
  • Delivering the service promised on the website

Step 19: Does Any Other Party Sign In?

Google asked whether any other party signs in or manages the account.

We answered no, because the account is primarily managed by us and our team.

If you have external agencies, contractors, MCC managers, or third-party partners accessing the account, your answer should reflect that.

Step 20: Who Pays for the Account?

Google asked who pays for the Google Ads account.

We answered that the company pays for it.

This helps Google connect billing responsibility with business responsibility.

Step 21: License or Certification Requirements

Google asked whether the business requires any type of license or certification to provide its services.

There were multiple options, such as government license, professional license, vendor license, and no additional license required.

In our case, we selected that no additional license was required for the services being advertised.

However, this depends on your industry.

If you are in finance, healthcare, legal, crypto, insurance, education, or other regulated niches, you may need additional proof.

Step 22: Customer Data and Privacy Policy

Google asked how the company protects current and potential customer information.

We mentioned that we have terms of service and privacy policy pages on our website. We also added the privacy policy link.

This is very important.

Your website should have:

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact page
  • About page
  • Clear business details
  • Refund policy, if applicable
  • Service explanation

Google wants to see that users can understand who they are dealing with.

Step 23: Add Final Comments

At the end, Google asked whether there was any other information that may help approve the account.

We wrote a simple final comment:

We are looking to advertise our services. Thank you.

Then we submitted the verification.

What Happened After Submission?

After submission, the account went into advertiser verification review.

A few days later, the account was approved. Google showed the message that all requirements were completed. After verification, the verified advertiser name and location started appearing in the ad disclosure, and the ads were running again.

This shows that if the details are properly submitted, Business Operations Verification can be completed successfully.

Common Mistakes in Google Ads Business Operations Verification

Here are some mistakes you should avoid:

1. Selecting the Wrong Business Type

If you are an agency but select first-party seller, Google may get confused.

2. Uploading Mismatched Documents

Your business name, address, website, and documents should match.

3. Giving Vague Business Descriptions

Do not write one-line unclear answers. Explain what your company does.

4. Missing Privacy Policy

If your website does not have a privacy policy, contact page, and terms, it may look incomplete.

5. Hiding Third-Party Relationships

If someone else manages your campaigns or fulfills your service, mention it truthfully.

6. Not Explaining Digital Services Properly

If your service is non-tangible, explain that it is delivered online as consulting, management, or digital service.

7. Delaying the Verification

Google may give you a deadline. Do not wait until the last day.

Business Operations Verification Checklist

Before submitting, make sure you have:

  • Correct business name
  • Correct website URL
  • Matching company address
  • Business registration or license
  • Privacy policy page
  • Contact page
  • Terms page
  • Clear service explanation
  • Correct business type
  • Correct advertiser role
  • Supporting documents
  • Clear customer support details
  • Accurate billing responsibility
  • Explanation of how services are delivered

Final Words

Google Ads Business Operations Verification may look difficult, but it becomes easier when you understand what Google is asking for.

The key is simple:

Be honest, clear, and consistent.

Your website, documents, business name, address, services, and Google Ads account should all tell the same story.

If you are running ads for your own business, explain that clearly. If you are a marketing agency running ads for clients, select the correct agency option and provide supporting proof.

In our case, after submitting the company details, license, Google Partner proof, privacy policy, business model, and correct business type, the account was approved and the ads started running again.

If you are facing Google Ads Advertiser Verification, Business Operations Verification, account suspension, or policy issues, you can contact me and my team for professional help.

We are a Google Partner company and we help clients with:

  • Google Ads Advertiser Verification
  • Business Operations Verification
  • Google Ads Account Suspension
  • Google Ads Management
  • Google Ads Disapprovals
  • PPC Campaign Setup and Optimization

Need help? Contact us through AliRaza.co or AARSWEBS.com and we would love to assist you.

About the Author: Ali Raza

An Internet Entrepreneur who converts visitors into customers; A Google & Microsoft Advertising Professional with years of experience in Internet Marketing, Social Media and Blogging.

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