Google Ads Updates: What's Changing in Performance Max and Demand Gen Billing

New reporting, billing shifts, and API deadlines reshape how you manage paid search campaigns. Here's what owners need to know.

The 5-second version

  • Performance Max reporting is evolving with new metrics and tracking options for campaign visibility.
  • Demand Gen billing changes affect how you're charged for lead and conversion campaigns.
  • Google Ads API deadline issues may impact automated campaign management—check your integrations now.

Google Ads is in flux. Performance Max reporting is being reimagined, Demand Gen billing is shifting, and API deadlines are approaching. For owners running paid search campaigns, these aren't background noise—they affect how clearly you see results, how much you pay, and whether your automation keeps running.

Performance Max Reporting Gets an Overhaul

Performance Max has been Google's black-box automation play for years. You feed it a budget and creative, and it spreads your ads across Google's network. The catch: visibility into what's working has been murky. Google is now upgrading reporting to surface more granular data on asset performance, audience segment contribution, and channel-level results. For you, that means better decision-making. You'll see which creative formats (video, static image, text) actually convert, and which audience segments justify higher bids.

This matters because better data = less guesswork. If you've been running Performance Max on faith alone, this reporting upgrade gives you the levers to optimize within the automated system.

Demand Gen Billing Shifts

Demand Gen campaigns (lead and conversion focused) are moving to a new billing structure. What you were charged per conversion or lead may change. This affects your cost-per-lead projections, ROI math, and budget allocation. If you're relying on historical CPC or CPA data to forecast Q3 spend, update that model now. A shift in how Google charges can look like performance degradation if you don't account for the structural change.

API Deadline Looming

Google Ads API has versions. Older ones are being deprecated. If you're using third-party tools—bid management software, custom reporting dashboards, automation platforms—check whether they've migrated to the current API. If they haven't, your integrations will break on the deadline. No automation means manual campaign management, which costs time and accuracy.

Contact your tools' support teams and confirm migration status. If a vendor hasn't moved yet, escalate. This is not optional.

What You Should Do Now

  • Review Performance Max campaigns to understand the new reporting structure and identify optimization opportunities.
  • Audit Demand Gen billing impact on your cost-per-lead and adjust budget forecasts.
  • Check with any third-party tools or automation vendors about API migration status and deadlines.
  • Schedule a quarterly review of your paid search setup to ensure nothing breaks mid-campaign.

These changes are Google optimizing its own platform. The winners are owners who stay ahead of the changes. The losers are those who ignore them until something breaks.

Search Engine Land's Google Ads coverage includes recent updates on Performance Max reporting, Demand Gen billing changes, and Google Ads API deadline issues.Search Engine Land, May 26, 2026

Questions owners ask

What's changing in Performance Max reporting and why should I care?

Google is updating how Performance Max campaigns report performance data, giving you better visibility into which assets and audiences drive conversions. Clearer reporting means you can optimize spend faster and reduce wasted budget on underperforming segments.

How will Demand Gen billing changes affect my budget?

Demand Gen (Google's lead and conversion campaign product) is shifting its billing model. You need to review how you're charged per lead or conversion to ensure budget forecasts and ROI targets align with the new structure.

What Google Ads API deadline should I be worried about?

Legacy Google Ads API versions are sunsetting, and integrations that haven't migrated to current APIs will stop working. If you use third-party tools, automation, or custom reporting, confirm they've upgraded or risk campaign management blackouts.

Do I need to change my campaigns because of these updates?

Not immediately, but you should audit your accounts to confirm reporting accuracy, understand new billing charges, and ensure connected tools are current. Early review prevents surprises and lost campaign data.

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