If you’ve ever seen the “Eligible (limited)” status in your Google Ads account, you’ve probably thought, “What is that? Is it bad? How do I fix it?”
The eligible (limited) status means you can still advertise, as you are eligible, but there are certain policies in place that limit the kind of targeting or language you can use. It’s not bad, and there’s nothing you need to do to “fix it.”
In this article, we’ll explore one of those limitations in detail: sensitive categories. Specifically, we’ll look at why you might be in a sensitive interest category, what limitations are in place, and then three strategies you can use to still get outstanding results from Google Ads.
A sensitive category (also referred to as a sensitive ad category or sensitive interest category) is an industry in which Google Ads doesn’t allow personalized advertising. Why? In order to protect user privacy and obey local laws, Google restricts the targeting you can use if your business is in a sensitive interest category.
For example, it is illegal in many countries to discriminate in hiring based on age or gender, so you can’t exclude age ranges or genders from your campaigns if you’re advertising jobs.
Note that you can still advertise on Google if you’re in a sensitive interest category; you just can’t access personalized advertising features like remarketing, custom segments, and lookalikes.
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There are five reasons why your business may be classified in a sensitive interest category. These are explained in full detail in the Google Ads Help Center, so here are my own “plain English” explanations and examples.

You can find a full list of Google Ads sensitive ad categories here.
If your business falls under a sensitive interest category, you can’t use the following targeting features in Google Ads, collectively called personalized advertising:
Advertisers in the “access to opportunities” category may also have limitations on the type of demographic (age, gender, parental status, household income), detailed demographic, and location targeting they can use.
While this may seem extremely limiting—and it’s true, it can be—there are still plenty of useful Google Ads targeting features available to advertisers in sensitive categories. These include:
Your ad targeting isn’t the only restriction in a sensitive interest category. Although the official documentation isn’t super clear on this, Google is much more strict about showing ads on its own properties, like YouTube and Discover, versus showing ads on the Display Network. This means you could add the exact same image or headline to a display campaign and a Demand Gen campaign, and it could be approved in display but disapproved in Demand Gen.
Can you still use Demand Gen campaigns in a sensitive interest category? In my experience, I’ve seen advertisers that fall under “personal hardships” and “access to opportunities” successfully use Demand Gen campaigns, but I’ve not seen an advertiser in the “sexual interest” category successfully use Demand Gen.

You can’t control if your business’s industry is considered sensitive according to Google’s guidelines, but you can avoid ad limitations like this depending on your targeting strategy.
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There are no “easy” industries on Google Ads anymore. Whether your challenge is trying to stretch a small budget, operating in a tiny niche, exposure to sky-high CPCs, or navigating a sensitive interest category, the key to success is creativity.
Here are three proven Google Ads targeting strategies that I encourage you to try if you or your clients fall into a sensitive category.
Custom segments are an extremely powerful type of audience targeting because you can serve ads to people based on what they’ve searched for on Google, the types of websites they visit, or the types of apps they use.
Although you can’t use custom segments in sensitive ad categories, you can use their close cousin: content targeting.
Specifically, in a display campaign, you can place your ads on specific websites and/or apps from the display network, and in a video campaign, you can place your ads on specific YouTube channels and /or videos.

Here are some examples to kickstart your thinking:
Non-linear targeting is a strategy I developed to reach your target audience exclusively through Google’s “pre-built” data segments. Even in a sensitive category, you can still use:
While these audience segments are probably much larger than the audience you’d like to target, your ideal customers are absolutely contained within some or all of these segments. Since you can’t use personalized advertising to reach them, simply get creative and cast a wider net.

Here are some examples to kickstart your thinking:
The key is identifying interests, needs, or offerings that overlap with your audience, rather than trying to find perfect matches. Then, it’s up to your ad creative to appeal to your target audience, and not appeal to your non-target audience… which brings us to the third strategy.
When direct audience targeting is limited, your ad creative must do the heavy lifting. This strategy relies on the ad itself – your text, image, and/or video assets, to attract the target audience and, more importantly, repel the non-target audience.
This is especially important when you’re using more broad targeting, like optimized targeting, Performance Max, or perhaps the non-linear targeting strategy. When your targeting is broader, your creative must balance that out by being narrow, to ensure that your target audience engages with your ads (which trains the bidding and targeting algorithms), and similarly, to ensure that your non-target audience doesn’t engage with your ads (which also trains the bidding and targeting algorithms).
Here are a few tips to achieve effective creative-led targeting:
It’s true, navigating sensitive interest categories in Google Ads is a challenge. But by embracing creative thinking through content targeting, non-linear targeting, and creative-led targeting, you can build compliant and successful Google Ads campaigns. For more ways to find success on Google Ads, no matter your industry, see how our solutions can help.