5 Google Ads Mistakes Getting Your Travel Campaigns Suspended
1. The "Imposter Syndrome" (Brand Bidding Violations)
Google has zero tolerance for businesses pretending to be official airlines. If you are using trademarked terms like "Delta Airlines" or "American Airlines" directly in your ad copy or prominently on your landing pages without authorization, your account is at massive risk of suspension.
2. Lack of Account Warm-Up & Patience
Many new advertisers try to bid aggressively on third-party airline brands right out of the gate. If your Google Ads account is brand new and has no historical data or trust score, deploying high-risk keywords will trigger an immediate manual review and likely a ban.
3. The "Lazy Landing Page" Trap
The travel pay-per-call niche is incredibly crowded. If you are ripping off competitor landing pages or using heavily abused pre-made templates, Google's bots will flag your site for "Low-Quality Content" or "Circumventing Systems."
4. Bait-and-Switch Pricing (Misrepresentation)
Google is obsessed with user experience. If your ad promotes a "Flight to Dubai for $150", but the user clicks through and sees a different price (or no price at all), Google will hit you with a Misrepresentation Policy Violation.
5. The "Bridge Page" Penalty
A "Bridge Page" is a landing page that offers no original content or native booking engine, existing solely to redirect users to a third-party affiliate portal like Expedia or TravelPayouts. If your user clicks your ad, hits your site, and is immediately forced to click "Book Now" to go to a different domain, Google will suspend you.
Stop Stressing Over Account Bans
You don't need to live in fear of the red banner of death. By auditing your campaign structure and utilizing compliant, high-converting landing pages, you can scale your flight booking calls safely.
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