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Inventory management

Ads.txt FAQs

Below are answers to some of the most frequently asked questions about ads.txt.

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How do I set up an ads.txt file for WordPress?

Consider using a plugin to create your ads.txt file in WordPress. If you already use a plugin to place ads, it might include a feature to create your ads.txt file. Use this WordPress search can help you get started.

My CMS doesn't let me place a file on my root domain. What should I do?

Contact your CMS provider who should provide you with the facility to host an ads.txt file on your behalf.

What if the ads.txt file is hosted on a subdomain?

Google crawls and enforces ads.txt files placed on subdomains, where one exists, and is referenced from the ads.txt file on the root domain.

To reference a subdomain in your root domain ads.txt file, you add a subdomain= declaration.

For example, let's say your ads.txt file for example.com needs to reference the subdomain subdomain.example.com. You add this line to your root domain ads.txt file: subdomain=subdomain.example.com.

Visit the IAB ads.txt specification for additional details on subdomain referral.

Note: You only need to do this if the authorized seller or your publisher ID are different for the subdomain when compared to the root domain.
Does Google support redirects?

Google supports a single HTTP redirect to a destination outside the original root domain (for example, example1.com/ads.txt re-directs to example2.com/ads.txt). Check the IAB update.

Multiple redirects are also supported, as long as each redirect location remains within the original root domain. For example:

  • example.com/ads.txt redirecting to www.example.com/ads.txt
  • example.com/ads.txt redirecting to subdomain.example.com/ads.txt
  • example.com/ads.txt redirecting to example.com/page/ads.txt
How does Google enforce ads.txt files?

Google uses the content of any ads.txt files hosted on a root domain to determine which seller accounts are allowed to serve ads on that domain.

Google runs an auction and returns a winning ad for requests on sites where an ads.txt file exists with a correctly listed publisher identifier. If the identifier in the file is incorrect, an auction is not run for that request.

What information goes in an ads.txt file?

Create a text file named ads.txt and include separate lines for each exchange or SSP that is authorized to sell your inventory. Each of these lines should contain three pieces of data (plus a fourth optional field), in the format:

<Field #1>, <Field #2>, <Field #3>, <Field #4>

  • <Field #1>: The canonical domain name of the system where bidders connect. This may be the operational domain of the system, if it’s different than the parent corporate domain, to facilitate WHOIS and reverse IP lookups to establish clear ownership. The SSP or exchange may publish the domain name to use.

    For Google seller accounts, the domain name is always google.com.

  • <Field #2>: The publisher identifier associated with the seller or reseller account for the system in field #1. This must contain the same value as that specified in an SSP or exchange transaction (such as OpenRTB bid requests). Typically, in OpenRTB, this is the publisher.id field. For OpenDirect, it is typically the publisher’s organization ID. 

    For Google seller accounts, use the publisher ID displayed in each account (for example, pub-0000000000000000). To find the publisher ID:

    Note: Only include the pub- prefix and the 16-digit numeric code in your declaration. Delete the product-specific prefix (for example, ca- or ca-video-). If you monetize through multiple Ad Manager and/or AdSense accounts, you must include a separate row for each account, with its corresponding pub- code.
    Domains hosting an ads.txt file where the seller’s publisher ID isn’t listed are no longer monetized through Ad Manager, and Google no longer buys ads on such sites. Updating your ads.txt files to include publisher IDs for each site you want to monetize is recommended (learn how to update ads.txt in Ad Manager). If you use Scaled Partner Management, we recommend working with your child partners to include your publisher ID in their ads.txt files.
  • <Field #3>: The type of account or relationship. This field should be treated as case-insensitive when interpreting the data.
    • A value of 'DIRECT' indicates that the publisher (content owner) directly controls the account indicated in field #2 and has a direct business contract between the publisher and the advertising system.

      Google publishers who directly control the account indicated in field #2 should specify 'DIRECT'.

    • A value of 'RESELLER' indicates that the publisher has authorized another entity to control the account indicated in field #2 and resell their ad space via the system in field #1.

      Google publishers who don't directly control the account indicated in field #2 should specify 'RESELLER'. For example, an Ad Manager account using Scaled Partner Management should specify 'RESELLER' for inventory the account doesn't directly manage.

  • <Field #4>: (Optional): A unique identifier for the advertising system within a certification authority, which maps to the entity listed in field #1. One certification authority is the Trustworthy Accountability Group (TAG), and the TAG ID would be included here.

    For Google seller accounts, the TAG ID is f08c47fec0942fa0.

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