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Google Ads CPC Spiked 2–3x in 2026 — What's Going On and How to Deal With It

YeezyPay

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YeezyPay — Trusted Google Ads Agency Accounts
Forum threads have been full of the same complaint since March: Google Ads costs blew up out of nowhere. Campaigns that ran stable for months suddenly started burning through budget with the same (or worse) results. One user on Reddit reported that across almost all his accounts and verticals, CPC and CPA doubled or tripled between March and May — no changes on his end. Keywords that used to run at €1–2 on Maximize Conversions are now clearing €4–5+.

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Here's what's actually behind it, what moves will only make things worse, and what to actually do.

Why Did CPC and CPA Spike?​

Google hasn't said a word about it officially and probably won't. But affiliates who've been running Search for years have pieced together a pretty clear picture.

The auction got more expensive. A lot of that gets attributed to AI tools lowering the barrier to entry — more advertisers, more competition, same inventory. Google's own announcements about AI-driven ad growth back this up. When new players flood a niche, the old-timers push up bids to hold their position. CPC goes up even if you haven't touched a setting.

Worth noting: rising CPC doesn't mean you broke something. In a Reddit thread about a 300% CPC jump, one of the top comments was to check Auction Insights first — did a new competitor show up, is someone aggressively buying up impression share? Before you start fixing your own campaigns, make sure the problem isn't just the market.

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Costs compound. If CPC doubles, the same $500 budget gets you 125 clicks instead of 250. You need twice the time and budget to gather enough data to even know if a funnel still works. And if an account gets flagged or banned mid-test, you lose both the clicks and whatever's sitting unused on the balance. That's a real risk when traffic is already expensive.

This is actually where account infrastructure matters — running through agency accounts with a real spend history (where $10k+ months are normal) significantly reduces the ban risk compared to fresh self-serve accounts. YeezyPay provides agency accounts from 10+ MCC networks built for gray-hat verticals, and if an account does get blocked, helps recover the remaining balance. Faster rotation, less wasted capital.

Smart bidding is amplifying it. Maximize Conversions doesn't promise cheap clicks — it promises maximum conversions within budget. If the algorithm thinks an expensive click will convert, it'll pay for it. When competition is low, this isn't noticeable. When a well-funded advertiser enters your niche, your smart bidding campaigns will just keep paying whatever it takes.

One Reddit commenter broke down the 2026 spike as two things working together:
  • Google expanded broad match reach inside Maximize Conversions campaigns
  • Advertisers experimenting with Smart Bidding create a feedback loop where rising CPC pushes the system to bid even more aggressively to hit conversion targets
His take: switching to tROAS can help, but only if you set the target based on your actual historical ROAS — not what you wish it was.
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Broad match and close variants are getting wider. Keywords don't mean what they used to. The system is less interested in exact keyword matching and more focused on inferred intent — landing page, ad copy, conversion history. Sometimes this surfaces genuinely useful traffic. More often it pulls in adjacent junk. A campaign targeting "online casino sign up Brazil" starts picking up review queries, promo code searches, brand reputation searches, "no deposit bonus" traffic. To Google, these are related intents. To a buyer, they're completely different users with completely different conversion rates.

AI Max makes this worse. Google's own documentation says AI Max expands reach into new queries through broad match, and learns from existing keywords, creatives, and URLs. For mainstream e-commerce that might be fine. For affiliates, wider targeting means noisier Search Terms and weaker signals. More on this in the next section.

Less data = worse bidding. When CPC goes up, fewer clicks come in. Fewer clicks means fewer conversions. Fewer conversions means Smart Bidding doesn't know who to target. The algorithm bids worse, which leads to even less efficient traffic — a feedback loop that's hard to break once you're in it.

Another Reddit comment from a recent Google Search Ads 2026 thread put it simply: if the account has historical data and decent volume, move to tROAS. If it's a new campaign with thin data, let Maximize Conversions run for 2–4 weeks first so the algorithm has something to work with.

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What Not to Do​

Don't just raise the budget. If current settings are already bringing expensive clicks, more budget just means more expensive clicks. Google gets more money to repeat the same mistakes — broad targeting, weak search terms, unoptimized landing page.

Don't blame Core Update. Someone in a Reddit thread on this topic explicitly said there's no data actually connecting Core Update to search ad CPC increases. The real drivers are higher bids, more competition, and more advertisers on automated strategies.

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Don't try to fix CPC through bids alone. If one ad group has mixed intent, Search Terms is full of garbage, and the landing page doesn't deliver on what the ad promises — the bidding strategy doesn't matter. Maximize Conversions, tCPA, tROAS, and manual CPC will all just distribute the same weak budget differently.

Don't change everything at once. When CPC jumps 2–3x, the instinct is to touch everything — budget, strategy, keywords, landing page, negatives, match types. The problem is you'll never know what actually fixed it. Change things one at a time.

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What To Actually Do When CPC Spikes​

Start with Auction Insights. Open the campaign, group, or keyword → Auction Insights. Check whether competitors' impression share went up, whether they started appearing above you more often, and whether any new players showed up. If a well-funded team entered your GEO and they're not leaving, trying to fight them back to your old CPC probably isn't realistic.

Compare periods properly. Pull the last 2–4 weeks against your last stable period. Look at CPC, CPA, CTR, CVR, Search Impression Share, spend by campaign, and Search Terms side by side. If CPC went up but CTR and CVR are holding — the market just got more expensive. If CTR and CVR dropped alongside CPC — the algorithm started pulling in less relevant traffic.

Clean up Search Terms. Queries that converted → consider moving to their own group. Near-miss queries → watch. Off-intent traffic → negative. Pay close attention to reviews, job listings, promo codes, "free bonus", complaints, "how does X work" — these will eat budget without contributing conversions.

Revisit bidding strategy. If Maximize Conversions is producing expensive clicks, try tCPA or tROAS — both give the algorithm a target ceiling to optimize toward. Also check Search Partners separately; several commenters on BlackHatWorld noted that Search Partners traffic has gotten noticeably worse, and at least one person explicitly recommended disabling it if it's not converting. As one BHW user put it, manual bidding isn't dead, but Google is pushing harder toward automation — and junk from Search Partners has become a real problem.

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Test a different GEO before scaling. If the competitive situation in your current GEO has fundamentally changed, testing the same setup in a neighboring market often makes more sense than fighting for the same clicks at 3x the price. Just don't go in with a heavy budget on a fresh account — the risk of a ban or manual review is higher. Agency accounts with existing spend history handle this a lot better. YeezyPay issues agency accounts from 10+ MCC networks for gray-hat verticals, no spend limits, one-stop top-up and account setup. Quick enough that switching GEO doesn't have to kill your momentum.

Final Thoughts​

Rising CPC in Google Ads doesn't always mean something's broken in your account. The price can go up because of new competition, more aggressive smart bidding, broader match expansion, or weaker algorithmic signals — often a combination.

The diagnostic order that actually works:
  1. Check Auction Insights — is this a market problem or an account problem?
  2. Compare periods — is it CPC alone, or are CTR and CVR dropping too?
  3. Clean Search Terms — cut off-intent traffic before doing anything else
  4. Then adjust bids or strategy if needed
If you're running multiple accounts across a team, a unified system helps a lot — otherwise you're finding out CPC spiked in account A after it's already burned a significant chunk of your budget. YeezyPay keeps linked agency accounts, reporting, and access control in one place so you can catch these things early instead of after the damage is done.
 
Thank you for all the precious information. I remember the good old times in 2013 when CPC was so low and stable for long time without too much competition for keywords.
 
MI
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