Google Labels AI-Made Ads
Google is introducing new labels that tell users when advertisements have been created or edited using generative artificial intelligence, marking an important step towards greater transparency as AI-generated marketing becomes increasingly realistic and more difficult to distinguish from traditional advertising.
What Has Google Changed?
The new feature adds a “How this ad was made” section to Google’s existing My Ad Center panel, which users can open from the three-dot menu or information icon on adverts shown in Google Search, YouTube and Discover.
This means users will now be able to see whether generative AI played a role in creating or editing the advertisement they are viewing.
Google says the change is intended to help people better understand the advertising they encounter while making it easier for businesses to comply with evolving transparency requirements.
As the company explains: “We want to help people better understand the ads they see, while providing advertisers with straightforward tools to navigate evolving industry standards.”
The rollout also represents quite a significant expansion of Google’s AI disclosure efforts. For example, until now, mandatory disclosure primarily focused on election advertising, where synthetic or digitally altered content presents particular risks.
How Will The Labels Work?
The way the system operates depends on how an advertisement was created. For example, when advertisers use Google’s own generative AI advertising tools, AI disclosures are applied automatically within the My Ad Center panel.
However, businesses creating adverts using third-party AI tools will be able to indicate that generative AI was involved by using a new disclosure control provided by Google.
The company says it wants “to make managing AI disclosures as simple as possible for advertisers”, automatically adding disclosures where its own AI tools have been used while also allowing advertisers using external systems to identify AI-generated or AI-edited content themselves.
It should be noted that, in some countries, local regulations may also require AI labels to appear directly on advertisements rather than only within My Ad Center.
Opportunities (And Challenges)
There’s no doubt that generative AI has transformed the way advertising content can be created. For example, businesses can now generate highly realistic product images, promotional videos and marketing artwork without arranging expensive photo shoots or creating physical prototypes. AI can also modify existing images, replace backgrounds and generate entirely new scenes that appear convincingly real.
That creates significant opportunities for businesses, particularly smaller organisations that previously lacked access to professional creative resources. However, it also creates new challenges.
Consumers may increasingly struggle to distinguish between genuine photography and AI-generated imagery, particularly when advertisements depict products in idealised or entirely synthetic settings. Google, therefore, believes that greater transparency will help address those concerns.
Its support documentation explains that more advanced generative AI “can create content that resembles real people, places, or events”, making it increasingly important to provide users with additional context about how advertising content has been produced.
Part Of A Wider Push For AI Transparency
Google has already introduced several initiatives designed to increase transparency around AI-generated content, including embedding imperceptible SynthID signals into content produced by its own AI tools and requiring disclosure of synthetic or digitally altered content in election advertising.
The company also notes that existing advertising safeguards continue to apply regardless of whether AI has been used.
As Google explains: “We continue to prohibit misleading and deceptive ads, whether created with AI or not, to keep the platform safe for everyone.”
The latest announcement therefore represents less of a new advertising policy and more of an expansion of Google’s broader approach to AI accountability.
It also arrives as governments and regulators increasingly focus on AI transparency. In many parts of the world, businesses are likely to face growing expectations that AI-generated commercial content should be identifiable rather than indistinguishable from traditionally created material.
Building Trust In An AI World
Perhaps the most significant aspect of Google’s announcement is what it says about the future of digital trust.
Only a few years ago, AI-generated advertising was relatively easy to identify because images often contained obvious flaws or unrealistic details.
Today’s generative AI systems produce increasingly convincing content that can be difficult for many people to distinguish from genuine photography.
As that capability continues to improve, transparency may become just as important as creativity.
Rather than asking whether businesses should use AI in marketing, the conversation is increasingly becoming one of how openly they should communicate its use.
Google’s new labels suggest that AI disclosure could gradually become a normal part of digital advertising rather than an exceptional requirement.
What Does This Mean For Your Business?
For businesses, Google’s new labels should not be viewed as a warning against using AI in marketing. On the contrary, generative AI offers organisations of every size the opportunity to create professional-quality advertising more quickly and at lower cost than ever before.
However, the announcement also highlights that transparency is becoming an increasingly important part of digital marketing.
It seems that customers are now placing growing value on authenticity, while regulators and technology platforms are introducing new ways to identify AI-generated content. Businesses that embrace AI while remaining open about how it is being used are therefore likely to strengthen trust rather than undermine it.
The wider lesson here goes beyond advertising. As AI becomes embedded across customer communications, websites, images, video and marketing campaigns, organisations should expect transparency to become an increasingly important part of brand reputation. Google’s latest announcement suggests the future of AI-powered marketing will depend not only on creating compelling content, but also on ensuring customers understand how that content was produced.



