Stevie Morris Digital Marketing1

07410 907 104

2 February 2026

How to Audit a Google Ads Account: The Complete Checklist

I've audited over 50 Google Ads accounts in the past year. Every single one—and I mean every single one—was wasting money on something avoidable.

Not "minor optimisation opportunities." Actual money bleeding out through conversion tracking bollocks, budget allocated to campaigns that haven't converted in months, or Quality Scores sitting at 3/10 because no one's looked at them in two years.

The worst part? Most business owners have no idea. They're told "Google Ads is expensive" or "our industry is competitive," when really, their account just needs a proper once-over.

So here's the exact checklist I use when auditing accounts. No fluff. Just the red flags that cost you money, and what good performance actually looks like.

---

Why Bother Auditing?

Three reasons:

1. You're probably wasting 20-30% of your budget. That's not a guess—it's what I find in most accounts.

2. Google's automation needs clean data. Feed it rubbish tracking or wrong signals, and it'll optimise you straight into bankruptcy.

3. Small problems compound. That negative keyword list from 2018? It's now blocking your best-performing searches.

I recommend auditing quarterly. More often if you're spending over £10k/month or making significant changes.

I audit accounts quarterly because Google changes things, campaigns drift, and what worked in January doesn't necessarily work in June. If you're wondering what you should actually pay for Google Ads management or whether to hire someone, I've broken down UK pricing in detail.

---

The 7-Category Audit Framework

1. Conversion Tracking (Fix This First)

This is where most accounts fall apart.

If your conversion tracking is broken, everything downstream is meaningless. Google's bidding algorithms, your ROAS calculations, your "winning" campaigns—all based on phantom data.

What to check:

  • Does the conversion count match reality?

Pull your CRM/GA4 data. Compare it to Google Ads conversions for the past month. If there's more than a 10% discrepancy, something's broken.

  • Are you tracking the right conversions?

I've seen accounts optimising for newsletter sign-ups when they should be tracking purchases. Or counting every form view as a lead. Google doesn't know the difference—you need to tell it.

  • Is enhanced conversions set up?

In 2026, this isn't optional anymore. First-party data matters, especially with GDPR and cookie restrictions. If you're not using enhanced conversions, you're flying blind.

  • Attribution settings consistent?

Check that all conversion actions use the same attribution model and conversion window. Mixing data-driven with last-click? That's a recipe for confused reporting.

Red flag: Conversion tracking hasn't been touched since the account was created. Or worse—"conversions" includes button clicks that aren't actual business outcomes.

---

2. Campaign Structure & Settings

The foundation of your account.

Poor structure means you can't scale without chaos. Good structure means you can spot problems instantly and make changes with confidence.

What to check:

  • Are Search and Display separated?

Running them together dilutes your data. Search intent is different from browsing intent. Split them.

  • Campaign names make sense?

If you can't tell what a campaign does from its name, neither can anyone else managing the account. Use a consistent naming convention.

  • Settings consistent across campaigns?

I regularly find accounts where one campaign targets "People in or regularly in the UK" and another targets "People interested in the UK." That second one is showing ads to Americans researching a UK holiday. Not your customer.

  • Budget allocated sensibly?

Your top-performing campaign shouldn't be "Limited by budget" while your experimental campaign from 2022 has £50/day to burn.

What good looks like:

  • Clear campaign naming (e.g., "Search_Brand_UK" or "PMax_Ecommerce_Q1")
  • Separate campaigns for different objectives
  • Location targeting: "Presence" only (not "Interest")
  • Budget flowing to what's working

Red flag: Ten campaigns all called "Campaign 1," "Campaign 2," etc. Or Display and Search mashed together because "it's easier."

---

3. Keywords & Match Types

Where your money actually goes.

Keywords determine who sees your ads. Get this wrong, and you're either missing opportunities or haemorrhaging budget on irrelevant traffic.

What to check:

  • Search Terms Report review

This is non-negotiable. Go through your actual search queries from the past 30 days. You'll find gold (new keywords to add) and absolute garbage (queries you're somehow matching to).

  • Match type balance

All Broad Match? You're probably wasting money. All Exact? You're missing opportunities. I typically use 60% Phrase, 30% Exact, 10% Broad (with tight negative lists).

  • Keywords per ad group

More than 20 keywords in a single ad group is a red flag. Ideally, keep it under 10 closely related terms. If you have 50+ unrelated keywords in one ad group, your ads aren't relevant to half your searches.

  • Negative keywords

When did you last add negatives? If it's been more than a month, you're wasting money. Negative keywords are more critical now than ever - here's why. Check campaign-level and account-level negative lists.

Benchmark: A healthy account has 3-5 positive keywords for every 1 negative keyword. Too few negatives = wasted spend. Too many = you're blocking good traffic.

Red flag: Seeing queries like "how to" or "free" or "jobs" in your Search Terms Report. That's budget on people who will never buy.

---

4. Quality Score & Ad Relevance

This is money on the table.

Quality Score directly affects your cost-per-click. A keyword with QS 3 pays 67% more per click than one with QS 7. Same click, same traffic—you're just overpaying.

What to check:

  • Quality Scores below 5

Pull a report of all keywords with QS 5 or lower. These are costing you. Pause or improve them.

  • Expected CTR

If it's "Below average," your ad copy isn't compelling enough for that keyword. Rewrite it or pause the keyword.

  • Ad relevance

"Below average" means your ad doesn't match the search intent. Fix the ad or change the keyword targeting.

  • Landing page experience

Google's telling you your landing page is slow or irrelevant. Test a different page or improve load times.

What good looks like:

  • Quality Scores 7-10 on your main keywords
  • All three QS components (Expected CTR, Ad Relevance, Landing Page) "Above average" or "Average"

Red flag: Quality Scores sitting at 3-4 for months. You're paying Google a premium for the privilege of terrible placement.

---

5. Ad Copy & Extensions

What people actually see.

Your ad is competing with 3-4 others on the same page. If yours looks like everyone else's, you've already lost.

What to check:

  • Responsive Search Ads optimised

Check the "Ad Strength" metric. Anything below "Good" needs more headlines or descriptions. Aim for "Excellent."

  • Headlines use the keyword

At least one headline should mirror the user's search. If they search "Google Ads consultant UK," that exact phrase should appear in your ad.

  • Unique value proposition

What makes you different? Price? Speed? Guarantee? It should be obvious from your headlines.

  • Callouts in use

These boost CTR by 10-15%. If you're not using callouts, sitelinks, and structured snippets, you're leaving money on the table.

  • Extensions relevant

I've seen estate agents with callouts like "Free Shipping" (copy-pasted from a template). Make sure your extensions actually apply to your business.

Benchmark CTR:

  • Branded Search: 15-25%
  • Non-branded Search: 4-8%
  • Shopping: 0.8-1.5%
  • Display: 0.4-0.6%

If you're below these, your ads aren't working.

Red flag: All ads use generic copy ("Best service," "Great prices," "Call us today"). Or worse—no ad extensions at all.

---

6. Bidding Strategy & Budget

How you're spending your money.

Bidding strategy determines how aggressively Google chases clicks or conversions. Get it wrong, and you'll either run out of budget by noon or barely spend anything.

What to check:

  • Strategy matches your goal

If your goal is leads, "Maximise Clicks" is the wrong strategy. Use "Maximise Conversions" or "Target CPA" once you have enough conversion data (50+ conversions in 30 days minimum). For ecommerce, consider switching to profit-based bidding instead of chasing revenue.

  • Target CPA realistic

Setting a £10 target CPA when your average is £45? Google can't work miracles. Set targets based on actual historical performance, not wishful thinking.

  • Performance Max overreach

PMax is powerful, but I've seen it cannibalise branded traffic and waste money on low-intent placements. Check the "Insights" tab for where your budget's actually going.

  • Shared budgets causing issues

Shared budgets across multiple campaigns sound efficient, but one campaign can hog the lot. I prefer individual budgets for control.

What good looks like:

  • Budget sufficient for at least 2-3x your target CPA per day
  • Bidding strategy aligned with conversion tracking
  • Room to scale (not hitting budget limits on top performers)

Red flag: Using "Maximise Conversions" with no target CPA on a brand-new account with 3 conversions. Or burning through your monthly budget in week one.

---

7. Reporting & Attribution

Understanding what's actually working.

You can't improve what you don't measure. But measuring the wrong things is worse than not measuring at all.

What to check:

  • ROAS vs Revenue

High revenue doesn't mean profit. What is a good ROAS for your industry? Check UK benchmarks here. Check your actual Return on Ad Spend. Anything above 400% is generally healthy for ecommerce (depending on margins). Below 200%? You're losing money.

  • Conversion lag

How long from click to conversion? If it's 7+ days, you need a longer conversion window in your tracking, or you're undercounting.

  • Attribution model

Are you using Last Click? That ignores everything before the final click. Data-Driven attribution gives a fuller picture (if you have enough data).

  • Connecting to CRM/GA4

Google Ads lives in a silo. Pull your actual business data—not just what Google tells you. I've found accounts where Google reported 50 conversions but the CRM had 12 actual customers.

Benchmark conversion rates (UK):

  • Search Ads: 3-5%
  • Shopping Ads: 1.5-2.5%
  • Display Ads: 0.5-1%

Below these? Something's broken in your funnel (or targeting).

Red flag: Reporting conversions that don't match actual sales. Or celebrating a 600% ROAS on a product with 10% margins (you're still losing money).

---

After the Audit: Prioritise Ruthlessly

You've now got a list of problems. Here's the order I fix them:

1. Conversion tracking - Nothing else matters if this is broken

2. Quality Score killers - High-spend keywords with QS below 5

3. Budget reallocation - Move money from losers to winners

4. Negative keywords - Stop the bleeding immediately

5. Ad copy improvements - Low-hanging fruit for better CTR

6. Campaign structure - Longer-term, but foundational

Don't try to fix everything at once. Pick the three biggest money-drains and sort those first.

---

The Bottom Line

Most Google Ads accounts aren't failing because "Google Ads doesn't work." They're failing because no one's looked under the bonnet in 18 months.

If you've made it through this checklist and found even three things to fix, you'll probably save 10-20% of your monthly spend. If you found ten things? Your account's been on life support.

I audit accounts quarterly because Google changes things, campaigns drift, and what worked in January doesn't necessarily work in June. Set a reminder. Do the work. Your bank balance will thank you.

Want someone else to do it? That's literally what I do. Get in touch if you'd rather spend your time running your business instead of spelunking through Google Ads reports.

---

Related Articles

Google Ads Management Cost UK - Want someone else to audit your account professionally? Here's what you'll pay.

Why Negative Keywords Are More Important Now - Deep dive into one of the most commonly missed audit items.

The Rat Farm Effect: Why Chasing Wrong Metrics Kills Profit - Make sure you're auditing the metrics that actually matter.

Switching to POAS Bidding - After your audit, fix your bidding strategy to focus on profit.

---

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Get In Touch 

07410 907104

CONTACT Stevie Morris

© Stevie Morris 2024. All Rights Reserved.
envelopearrow-downmenu-circle linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram