About spending limits

For most campaigns, given your average daily budget, you'll never pay more than:
  • Your daily spending limit (2 times your average daily budget for most campaigns) on any particular day.
  • Your monthly spending limit (30.4 times your average daily budget for most campaigns) in any particular month.
Note: You may find a monthly spend limit across all campaigns on the "Summary" page under “Billing”. Learn more about changing how often you’re charged

Visit the budget report to learn more about your served cost and spending limits.

Daily spending limit

The daily spending limit is the maximum amount you can be billed for a campaign on a given day.

Diagram legend:= $

For most campaigns, including Hotel Commission Campaigns, the daily spending limit is your average daily budget multiplied by 2. On a given day, your campaign might spend up to twice your average daily budget to take advantage of fluctuations of traffic. At the end of month, the amount you will have spent on average every day will match your average daily budget.

For instance, if your average daily budget is set to $10 USD, your daily spending limit is going to be $10 USD * 2 = $20 USD. If you've set up a "Pay for Conversions" campaign type, there is no daily spending limit but the campaign will always stay within the monthly spending limits (your average daily budget multiplied by 30.4). Review the section below to learn more about monthly spending limits.

Note: Making changes to your average daily budget will impact your daily spending limit. Learn more about how budget changes take effect

Monthly spending limit

The monthly spending limit is the maximum amount you can pay for a campaign over a month.

You can calculate it by multiplying the average daily budget you set by the average number of days in a month, which is 30.4 (365 days in a year divided by 12 months). If your campaign starts during a calendar month, we'll only take into account the days the campaign was running.

For instance, if your average daily budget is set to $10 USD, your monthly spending limit is going to be $10 USD * 30.4 = $304 USD.

Note: Making changes to your average daily budget will impact your monthly spending limit. Learn more about how budget changes take effect

What happens when served costs exceed daily or monthly spending limits

In rare circumstances, your “served costs” may exceed your spending limits, but you’ll never actually pay more than your spending limits. To understand how this works, you’ll need to understand the difference between served costs and billed costs.

  • Served cost is the cost of all the clicks or impressions that the campaign received.
  • Billed cost is the actual amount you're responsible for paying after adjustments have been made to your account for items like invalid activity.

While served costs might exceed daily or monthly spending limits, you'll never pay more than these two limits. When such a situation occurs, Google will cover the difference. Learn more about how to view daily costs at the campaign and account level

Example: Exceeding daily spending limit

Assume you have a campaign with the following:

  • Average daily budget =$10 USD
  • Daily spending limit =$10 USD * 2 =$20 USD

Now assume that, on a particular day when consumer demand is very high, the campaign receives total clicks that cost $23 USD, which is more than the $20 USD daily spending limit for this campaign. Even though our systems are designed to stop showing ads when the $20 USD daily spending limit hits, it's possible in rare circumstances that our systems won’t detect discrepancies right away.

This isn't how much you pay. Your billed cost, or the amount you’re responsible for paying, will never exceed your spending limits. Therefore, in this case your billed cost is going to be the daily spending limit, $20 USD, and Google will cover the remaining $3 USD.

Example: Exceeding monthly spending limit

Assume you have a campaign with the following:

  • Average daily budget = $10 USD
  • Monthly Spending Limit = $10 USD * 30.4 = $304 USD

Now assume that, on a particular month when consumer demand is very high, the campaign receives total clicks that cost $310 USD, which is more than the $304 monthly spending limit for this campaign. Even though our systems are designed to stop showing ads when the $304 monthly spending limit hits, it's possible in rare circumstances that our systems won’t detect discrepancies right away.

$310 USD is the served cost for the campaign, or the cost of all the clicks or impressions that the campaign received.

This isn't how much you pay. Your billed cost, or the amount you’re responsible for paying, will never exceed your spending limits. Therefore, in this case, your billed cost is going to be the monthly spending limit, $304 USD, and Google will cover the remaining $6 USD.

Check your billed cost and served cost

In rare cases, campaigns may deliver more clicks and impressions than expected. However, it’s important to note that you'll never pay more than your spending limits.

If you'd like to determine whether your campaign served cost exceeded your billed cost, follow these steps:

  1. In your Google Ads account, click the Campaigns icon Campaigns Icon.
  2. Click the Insights and reports drop down in the section menu.
  3. Click Report editor.
  4. Under the "Predefined reports (Dimensions)" drop down menu, select Other, then select Billed cost.
  5. You’ll find a report that lists served and billed costs for each campaign.
    • To calculate the difference, subtract “Billed cost” from “Served cost”.
    • To perform these calculations in bulk, select the download icon A picture of the download icon for Google Ads and Merchant Center in the top right corner of the report and save as a CSV file.

By default, the data is displayed daily and sorted by served cost. If you wish to assess a certain date range, remove the “Day” filter and set a date range in the upper right section above the table.

Related links

Was this helpful?

How can we improve it?
Search
Clear search
Close search
Google apps
Main menu