DEV Community

Cover image for Google AdSense Approval: The Complete Website Checklist for 2026
toolbox-poster
toolbox-poster

Posted on • Originally published at toolbox.starnomina.tn

Google AdSense Approval: The Complete Website Checklist for 2026

TL;DR
Getting approved for Google AdSense remains one of the biggest hurdles for new website owners. Google evaluates content quality, technical setup, policy compliance, and user experience before granting access. This 2026 checklist covers every requirement—content, technical, legal, and strategic—so you can submit with confidence.

📑 Table of Contents

  • AdSense Approval Overview
  • Content Requirements
  • Technical Requirements
  • Required Pages
  • Policy Compliance
  • Common Rejection Reasons
  • Post-Rejection Strategy
  • Ad Placement Best Practices
  • Earnings Optimization Basics
  • Best Practices
  • Common Mistakes
  • Tools
  • References

AdSense Approval Overview

Google AdSense is a contextual advertising program that lets website owners earn revenue by displaying targeted ads. The approval process evaluates whether your site provides genuine value to visitors and meets Google's publisher policies. Review typically takes 2–14 days.

📖 Definition — Google AdSense is a program run by Google through which website publishers serve ads targeted to site content and audience. Publishers earn revenue on a per-click (CPC) or per-impression (CPM) basis.

Content Requirements

Article Count — Publish at least 15–20 high-quality articles before applying. Google needs enough content to evaluate your niche and quality.

Article Length — Each article should be 800–2,000+ words. Thin content (under 300 words) signals low value.

Originality — All content must be 100% original. Scraped, spun, or AI-generated content without substantial human editing triggers rejection.

Niche Focus — Stick to a clear niche. Scattered topics make your site look unfocused and lower perceived expertise.

Media — Include relevant images, diagrams, or videos. Use properly licensed media with alt text for accessibility.

Publishing Cadence — Show consistent publishing activity in the 30 days before applying.

Technical Requirements

Requirement Status Details
SSL/HTTPS Required Every page must load over HTTPS with a valid certificate. Mixed content blocks AdSense scripts.
Responsive Design Required Site must be mobile-friendly. Google uses mobile-first indexing.
Page Speed Important Target Largest Contentful Paint (LCP) < 2.5s. Slow sites reduce ad viewability and approval chances.
Custom Domain Required Must use a custom domain (e.g., example.com). Free subdomains (example.blogspot.com) have limited eligibility.
Clean Navigation Important Clear header navigation, categories, and a sitemap. Google reviewers must be able to browse easily.
No Broken Links Important 404 pages and broken internal links signal a neglected site.

Pro Tip: 💡 Run your site through Google PageSpeed Insights and fix any Core Web Vitals issues before applying. AdSense reviewers consider page experience signals.

Required Pages

Google expects every publisher site to have these essential pages, easily accessible from the main navigation or footer:

  • Privacy Policy — Must disclose the use of cookies and third-party advertising (Google requires this for AdSense).

  • About Page — Explains who runs the site, the mission, and establishes credibility.

  • Contact Page — Provides a contact form or email address so visitors can reach the site owner.

  • Terms of Service / Disclaimer — Outlines the terms under which content is provided.

⚠️ A missing or generic privacy policy is one of the top rejection reasons. Your policy must specifically mention Google AdSense and the use of cookies for personalized advertising.

Policy Compliance

Your site must comply with the Google Publisher Policies and Google Publisher Restrictions. Key rules:

  • No adult, violent, or hateful content.

  • No copyrighted material used without permission.

  • No deceptive practices (fake news, misleading headlines, cloaking).

  • No illegal content or promotion of illegal activities.

  • No excessive advertising or intrusive pop-ups that block content.

  • No incentivized clicks ("click my ads to support me").

Common Rejection Reasons

Rejection Reason What It Means How to Fix
Low-value content Thin, duplicate, or AI-generated content Add depth, original research, and unique perspectives
Site under construction Not enough pages or placeholder content Publish 15+ complete articles before reapplying
Navigation issues Missing menus, broken links, poor UX Add clear navigation, fix 404s, improve mobile layout
Policy violation Prohibited content detected Remove violating content and review all policies
Insufficient traffic Very low or no organic traffic Focus on SEO and build organic traffic before reapplying
Missing pages No privacy policy, about, or contact page Create all required pages and link them from navigation

Post-Rejection Strategy

1. Read the Rejection Email — Google specifies the reason (e.g., "low-value content"). Address it directly.

2. Fix the Issues — Make substantive changes, not cosmetic ones. Add 5–10 new quality articles if content was the issue.

3. Wait 2–4 Weeks — Reapplying too quickly without meaningful changes leads to repeated rejections.

4. Reapply — Submit a fresh application through the AdSense dashboard after making improvements.

Ad Placement Best Practices

Once approved, ad placement affects both revenue and user experience:

  • Place one ad unit above the fold (visible without scrolling).

  • Use in-article ads between content sections for high viewability.

  • Avoid placing more ads than content—Google penalizes ad-heavy pages.

  • Use responsive ad units that adapt to screen size.

  • Enable Auto Ads initially, then refine placements based on performance data.

Earnings Optimization Basics

Earnings depend on traffic volume, niche CPC, ad placement, and geographic audience. High-CPC niches include finance, insurance, legal, and technology. Focus on growing organic traffic and improving ad viewability over chasing high-CPC keywords.

Best Practices

  • Apply only after meeting all content and technical requirements—first impressions matter.

  • Build some organic traffic (even modest) from search engines before applying.

  • Keep your site actively updated—don't let months pass without a new post.

  • Test your site across devices and browsers before submission.

  • Use Google Search Console to ensure your site is indexed and free of crawl errors.

Common Mistakes

Mistake Impact Fix
Applying with 3–5 short articles Instant rejection for low-value content Publish 15+ articles of 800+ words each
No SSL certificate AdSense code won't load; automatic rejection Install a free Let's Encrypt certificate
Copying privacy policy from another site May not mention AdSense/cookies specifically Generate one using a privacy policy generator and customize it
Reapplying the next day after rejection Repeated rejection with no review Wait 2–4 weeks and make substantial improvements
Using free subdomain hosting Limited or no eligibility for AdSense Register a custom domain

Tools

SSL Checker — Verify your SSL certificate is valid and properly configured for AdSense.

Security Scanner — Scan for mixed content, insecure resources, and security headers.

References

  • 📄 Google AdSense Program Policies

  • 📄 Google Publisher Restrictions

  • 📄 AdSense Eligibility Requirements

  • 📄 Web Vitals — Essential Metrics for a Healthy Site (web.dev)

🎯 Key Takeaway: 🎯 AdSense approval is not about tricks—it rewards genuine, well-structured websites. Focus on 15+ quality articles, full HTTPS, required legal pages, and clean navigation. Fix rejection reasons thoroughly and wait before reapplying.


Originally published on StarNomina ToolBox. Try our free online tools — no signup required.

Top comments (0)