AdShot Media LLC

Updated: 2026 ~ 8 min read Category: Google Ads Basics
Generated By AdShot Media AI.
Google Ads Fundamentals

Understanding Google Ads Match Types (2026 Guide)

Match types decide how wide Google can interpret your keywords. Use them correctly and you get more qualified traffic. Use them wrong and you pay for junk.

Best for: Lead Gen + E-commerce Goal: More qualified clicks Simple language

In this guide: Exact vs Phrase vs Broad, examples, when to use each, and a weekly negative keyword process.

Cheat Sheet

Match Types in One Table (Simple)

Think of match types as a “reach dial”. The more reach you allow, the more you must filter with negatives.

Match Type What it does (simple) Best use Risk level
Exact Shows for searches very close to your keyword meaning. High intent, tight control, brand terms, proven winners. Low
Phrase Shows for searches that include your meaning, with variations. Scaling with control; most service businesses should start here. Medium
Broad Shows for related searches, even if the words differ. Expansion when tracking is clean + negatives are strong. High
Negative Blocks junk searches. Always. This is how you protect budget. Prevents risk

Rule of thumb

If your account has low conversions or new tracking, start with Exact + Phrase. Add Broad only after you have data and a negative keyword habit.

The 3 match types

Exact vs Phrase vs Broad (with examples)

Below is the simplest explanation you can keep in mind while building campaigns.

Exact Match

Use when you want maximum control.

Best for winnersBrandHigh intent

Keyword: [solar panel installation]

May trigger: “solar panel installation near me”

Phrase Match

Balanced: more reach but still relevant.

Most accountsScalingControl

Keyword: "solar panel installation"

May trigger: “best solar panel installation company”

Broad Match

Highest reach. Needs strong filtering.

ExpansionNeeds negativesNeeds data

Keyword: solar panel installation

May trigger: “roof solar cost”, “home solar company”, etc.

Examples

Real search examples (Service business)

Imagine you run a solar installation company. Here’s how match types change what you pay for.

High-intent searches (good)

  • “solar installation near me”
  • “solar panel installers [city]”
  • “get solar quote today”
  • “best solar company [city]”

Low-intent searches (junk)

  • “solar panel DIY kit”
  • “solar panel jobs”
  • “how solar works”
  • “free solar panels”
Team reviewing search intent and campaign performance

Simple logic

Broad match will pick up more “junk” unless you block it. Exact/Phrase are cleaner, but may limit volume if your keyword list is small.

Visual

Risk vs Control (quick chart)

This is not exact science — it’s a simple picture that helps you decide.

Three bars: Reach vs Risk

ExactLow risk

Best when you want clean leads.

PhraseMedium

Most practical for scaling.

BroadHigh

Use with strong negatives + tracking.

Match Type Selector Slide: how much freedom should Google have?
Must-have

Negative keywords: the safety system

Negative keywords block irrelevant searches. If you don’t do this weekly, your budget will leak — guaranteed.

Weekly negative keyword routine

  • Open Search Terms → sort by spend
  • Mark irrelevant terms
  • Add as negatives (campaign or ad group)
  • Repeat every week

Common mistakes

  • Blocking terms that actually convert (be careful)
  • Not separating “research” vs “buying” intent
  • Waiting 30 days to do negatives

Examples (solar)

Good negatives: jobs, salary, DIY, free, pdf, meaning, definition, course, training, kit, used, second hand

Decision rules

How to choose match types (simple rules)

Your situation What to use Why
New account / low conversions Exact + Phrase Cleaner data = better learning
Stable conversions + weekly negatives Add Broad slowly Expansion without chaos
High budget, strong tracking Phrase + Broad (with negatives) Find new demand efficiently
Brand protection Exact brand + negatives Stop wasting spend on wrong intent

If you want AdShot Media to build it

We structure campaigns with the right match types + a strict negative keyword system so budgets go into high-intent searches.

Start on /launch
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Is Exact match still “exact” in 2026?

Exact is based on close meaning, not exact words. It’s still the highest control option compared to Phrase and Broad.

Should I avoid Broad match completely?

No — but don’t start with it in a new account. Broad works best when tracking is clean and negatives are maintained weekly.

Which match type is best for service businesses?

Phrase is usually the best balance. Use Exact for your top high-intent keywords and brand protection.

How often should I add negative keywords?

Weekly (minimum). If spend is high, check twice per week.

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