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Official statement

To access the advertising experience report, you must verify ownership of your site via Google Search Console.
0:32
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 2:10 💬 EN 📅 06/12/2017 ✂ 3 statements
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Other statements from this video 2
  1. 0:32 Le rapport d'expérience publicitaire influence-t-il vraiment votre SEO ?
  2. 1:43 Les annonces pleine page sont-elles vraiment meilleures que les pop-ups pour le SEO ?
📅
Official statement from (8 years ago)
TL;DR

Google requires ownership verification through Search Console to view the advertising experience report. This requirement now links access to advertising metrics with the technical validation of the site, strengthening the interconnection between SEO and advertising. Practitioners must ensure their Search Console access is active and up-to-date to avoid losing visibility on these strategic data points.

What you need to understand

Why does Google require this ownership verification?

Ownership verification through Search Console is Google's standard authentication mechanism to confirm that you truly control the site. Without this validation, anyone could access sensitive data from a domain they do not own.

This requirement now applies to the advertising experience report, which aggregates metrics on the interaction between your ads and your site. Google centralizes access to site data within a single secure ecosystem, preventing the proliferation of authentication mechanisms.

What exactly is the advertising experience report?

This report provides indicators on the quality of user experience when a visitor arrives at your site from a Google ad. It specifically analyzes loading speed, ad intrusiveness, and visual stability of landing pages.

The compiled data directly influences the Quality Score of your campaigns. A slow site or one filled with aggressive pop-ups penalizes your acquisition costs, even if your ads are perfectly targeted. Therefore, Search Console becomes the mandatory entry point for diagnosing these friction points.

How does this requirement change access management?

Traditionally, SEO and SEM teams worked in distinct silos with separate tools. Now, Search Console access becomes a prerequisite for advertising managers who want to optimize their landing pages.

This imposes closer technical coordination. If your SEM agency does not have Search Console rights, it will not be able to consult these critical metrics. Organizational structures will need to adapt or lose operational efficiency.

  • Mandatory verification: No access to the report without validated ownership in Search Console
  • Verification methods: HTML tag, server file, DNS, Google Analytics, or Tag Manager
  • Granular rights: A read-only Search Console user can view the report without changing settings
  • Multi-owners: Multiple individuals can verify the same site with different methods
  • Maintaining verification: Some methods (HTML tag) can be lost during a redesign if not redeployed

SEO Expert opinion

Does this requirement reveal a broader strategy from Google?

Google is gradually centralizing all site signals in Search Console, which is becoming the central hub of proprietary data. After the Core Web Vitals, page experience, and mobile-first indexing, now advertising metrics join the ecosystem.

This convergence is significant. It allows Google to cross-reference organic and paid data with a level of detail that was previously impossible. A site penalized in SEO for poor user experience will likely also experience a degraded Quality Score in SEA, reinforcing the coherence of signals.

What practical limitations should be anticipated?

Search Console verification can pose challenges in complex architectures. A site using aggressive CDN, multiple subdomains, or headless infrastructure sometimes encounters validation difficulties, especially with server file-based methods.

SEM agencies managing hundreds of client accounts will need to systematically request Search Console access. Many clients do not understand the difference between Google Ads and Search Console, which creates operational friction and delays. [To be confirmed]: Google has not communicated on a simplified access mechanism for MCC accounts managing large volumes.

Does this announcement hide any blind spots?

Google does not specify whether all types of campaigns are affected or only certain ad formats. Do Display, Shopping, and YouTube campaigns also generate data in this report? The documentation remains vague on the exact scope.

Another area of uncertainty is the data refresh frequency and history. A report updated with a three-day latency loses much operational value for optimizing campaigns in real-time. Google does not provide any SLA on these metrics, limiting their usability for quick tactical decisions.

Caution: If your Search Console verification relies solely on a Google Analytics tag and you change your tracking solution, you will lose access to all Search Console reports, including the advertising experience report. Prefer an independent verification method like DNS or server file.

Practical impact and recommendations

How can you check or establish ownership if it hasn't been done already?

Log in to Google Search Console and add your property if it does not exist. Choose between domain property (DNS validation, covers all subdomains and protocols) or URL property (validation through tag, file, or provider, more granular).

For DNS method, add a TXT record at your registrar with the value provided by Google. This approach is the most durable, as it survives redesigns and CMS migrations. DNS propagation usually takes 15 minutes to a few hours, rarely longer.

What common mistakes block access to the report?

Many sites lose their verification after a technical redesign because the HTML tag was not redeployed in the new template. Dev teams often disregard its existence if it is not documented in the migration scope.

Another classic trap: verifying only the www or non-www version while your campaigns point to the other variant. You must verify all active versions of your site (http, https, www, non-www) or use a domain property that encompasses them all.

How can you organize access for effective SEO/SEM collaboration?

Create Search Console users with appropriate rights for each participant. SEM analysts only need read-only access to view the advertising experience report, not administrative rights that would allow them to change indexing settings.

Document in a shared table who has access to what, with which verification method. When changing providers or agencies, immediately revoke obsolete access. Zombie Search Console accounts are a security vulnerability often overlooked.

These access and data governance optimizations may seem straightforward at first glance, but they require sharp technical and organizational coordination, especially in multi-site or multi-brand structures. If your organization lacks internal resources to orchestrate this infrastructure rigorously, hiring a specialized SEO agency ensures rapid compliance and secure rights management over time.

  • Ensure that all domain variants (www, non-www, http, https) are validated in Search Console
  • Prefer DNS verification for its durability against redesigns and migrations
  • Document the chosen verification method in the site's technical documentation
  • Assign read-only Search Console rights to SEM teams for report consultation
  • Quarterly audit the list of users with access and revoke inactive accounts
  • Test access to the advertising experience report after each verification to confirm data visibility
Search Console ownership verification becomes a non-negotiable technical prerequisite for accessing advertising experience metrics. Implement a robust verification method (preferably DNS), organize multi-team access with granular rights, and document your configuration rigorously to avoid any loss of access during technical or organizational changes.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Peut-on accéder au rapport d'expérience publicitaire sans compte Google Ads actif ?
Non, le rapport compile des données sur l'interaction entre vos annonces et votre site. Sans campagne Google Ads active générant du trafic, le rapport reste vide ou inaccessible car il n'y a aucune donnée à analyser.
La vérification Search Console d'un sous-domaine donne-t-elle accès aux rapports du domaine principal ?
Non, chaque sous-domaine nécessite sa propre vérification si vous utilisez une propriété d'URL. Seule une propriété de domaine (validation DNS) couvre automatiquement tous les sous-domaines et protocoles.
Combien de temps faut-il pour que le rapport devienne accessible après vérification ?
La vérification elle-même est instantanée une fois validée, mais le rapport nécessite que vos campagnes génèrent suffisamment de données. Comptez quelques jours à quelques semaines selon votre volume de trafic publicitaire.
Un utilisateur Search Console en lecture seule peut-il consulter le rapport d'expérience publicitaire ?
Oui, les droits en lecture seule suffisent pour consulter les rapports, y compris celui d'expérience publicitaire. Vous n'avez pas besoin de droits d'administration complets pour accéder aux données.
Que se passe-t-il si la vérification Search Console expire ou est supprimée ?
Vous perdez immédiatement l'accès à tous les rapports Search Console, y compris celui d'expérience publicitaire. Les données historiques sont préservées dans les systèmes Google mais redeviennent accessibles uniquement après re-vérification.
🏷 Related Topics
AI & SEO Search Console

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