1. ✅ Overview of the New Policy
In September 2025, Google will update its Political Content Policy, specifically for Google Shopping ads in the European Union, aligning with EU Regulation 2024/900 (“Transparency and Targeting of Political Advertising”).
Under this policy:
- Ads that are by, for, or on behalf of a political actor are restricted, unless they are purely private or commercial.
- Ads designed or likely to influence elections, referendums, voting behavior, or legislative/regulatory processes at any level (EU, national, regional, or local) are not permitted.
2. 🛑 Who Counts as a Political Actor?
The policy covers:
- Political parties or coalitions
- Candidates or officeholders in EU parliamentary or national elections
- Referendum campaign groups or messages urging a public vote
- Any messaging around legislative or regulatory initiatives
3. ✅ Which Ads Are Permitted (with Certification)
Ads permitted under the updated policy include:
- Official communications from the EU or member-state public authorities explaining electoral procedures, candidacy announcements, or referendum questions
- Public information messages on election participation or referendum modalities
- Communications by government officials that are not meant to influence outcomes
but only if the advertiser has been certified by Google
Certification involves applying through Google’s policy interface, and each Merchant Center account must be certified separately.
4. ⚠️ Real‑World Implications
- Automated bots that screen product data in Google Merchant Center may erroneously flag content, even if it’s satire, tees, or memes that reference political themes.
- Examples include healthcare-related words or serious claims that trigger review flags, even if they are non-political.
- In such cases, you can submit a manual review request via Merchant Center, and Google typically reviews within about a week, assuming the content isn’t disallowed.
5. 📌 Broader Context: Why This Is Happening
This policy aligns with the upcoming EU Regulation 2024/900 (TTPA), which takes effect in the autumn of 2025, introducing strong transparency, labeling, and targeting restrictions for political ads.
Unlike Google, which limits EU political ads through policy restrictions, Meta has announced it will entirely halt political, electoral, and social-issue ads in the EU starting in October 2025 due to legal uncertainty. (Reuters)
6. 🧰 Best Practices for EU Advertisers
| What to Do | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Avoid political language in product listings if not certified | Bots may flag even innocuous content |
| Apply for political exemption if eligible | Official messages require separate certification per account |
| When flagged, request review promptly | Most flags can be overturned within a week |
| Review existing product metadata | Words like “vote,” “reform,” “healthcare” can trigger bots |
| Stay aware of U.S. rules if selling globally | U.S. platforms also have similar political ad policies |
7. 📎 Relevant Link
- For Google’s official stance and detailed policy wording, see the European Union political content policy article: support.google.com/merchants/answer/16474343
🧠 TL;DR
Google Shopping ads in the EU, starting from September 2025, will face stricter restrictions. Ads tied to political actors or messaging that influences elections or policy will generally be disallowed, unless the advertiser secures Google certification. The policy reflects the broader Regulation (EU) 2024/900, which enforces strict transparency and targeting rules. Advertisers should update their metadata, avoid using political phrasing, and utilize the appeal or exemption process when necessary.
