Google is experimenting with new labels that highlight the ads it believes are most relevant to a user’s search query, a move that could influence how users engage with paid results and how advertisers think about ad relevance.
What’s happening. Google began testing a new Search ads feature that adds “Strongest match” or “Strong match” labels to certain ads appearing in search results. The experiment was revealed by Google Ads Liaison Ginny Marvin, who said the labels are designed to help users quickly identify ads that are highly relevant to their search intent.


The test is currently limited to a small percentage of users in the U.S.
Why we care. Google is testing a new visual signal that could influence which ads users perceive as the most relevant and trustworthy. If the experiment expands, advertisers with strong ad relevance and quality signals may gain greater visibility and potentially higher click-through rates, while less relevant ads could become easier for users to overlook.
How it works. According to Google, the labels rely on existing ad quality and relevance signals already used within its advertising systems. Rather than introducing a new ranking factor, the experiment surfaces Google’s assessment of an ad’s relevance directly within the user interface.
The goal is to make it easier for users to identify the information most closely aligned with their search query.
Why Google is testing it. Google says the experiment is intended to improve the Search ads experience for both consumers and advertisers.
For users, the labels could provide an additional signal about which ads are most likely to address their needs.
For advertisers, the feature could help connect highly relevant ads with high-intent audiences, potentially increasing engagement and click-through rates.
Reading between the lines. The test reflects Google’s ongoing efforts to make ad relevance more visible.
Historically, relevance signals have largely operated behind the scenes through auction and quality systems. By displaying those signals more prominently, Google could be seeking to build greater user trust in sponsored results while rewarding advertisers that closely align ads with search intent.
The experiment also arrives as search platforms face increasing pressure to demonstrate the usefulness and quality of advertising experiences.
What to watch. Google emphasized that this is an early-stage experiment and has not indicated whether the labels will become a permanent feature. For now, advertisers may want to keep an eye on the test as another signal that ad relevance and quality remain central to Google’s vision for Search advertising.
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