You can catch someone’s interest and get them to click on your product, but a sale isn’t final until after checkout. Complete your sales and increase your conversions by providing a high-quality checkout experience for your customers. This article explains Google’s checkout requirements and offers recommendations on how to make checkout as easy as possible.
On this page
- Allow everyone to check out
- Provide accurate pricing
- Be consistent with currency
- Use language consistently
- Provide relevant information
- Collect user information responsibly and securely
Allow everyone to check out
Follow these requirements to meet the checkout needs of businesses and individuals:
- Allow individuals to purchase products. Individuals who aren’t part of a business must still be able to purchase from your website. This means that business-related fields, such as 'company name' or 'company ID number', need to be optional.
- Ensure that the product availability in your product data matches the availability on your landing page and checkout pages. If a product is listed as 'in stock' in an ad or listing, it should also be displayed as 'in stock' on the landing page. Customers should be able to add in-stock products to their basket and finalise their purchase.
- Tell customers about minimum order values. If you require that a minimum value is met before a purchase is completed or dispatched, set that value in your delivery settings. For example, if you require a customer to spend at least £30 GBP on your website to make a purchase, add a corresponding minimum order value to your delivery settings. Learn more about adding a minimum order value.
- You may require customers to create an account to complete a purchase, but the account signup process must be straightforward. For example, the account must be free and not require an app download or device change to finalise the purchase.
- Customers on your website can checkout as guests or verify their information via a mobile or desktop one-time passcode.
- Ensure security of sign-up and checkout processes. To protect your customers, you'll need a secure checkout process that is protected by a valid SSL certificate. Specifically, you'll need to secure payment processing, transaction processing and the processing of all personally identifiable information (such as name, email, physical address and payment information).
- Ensure that any third-party payment options are HTTPS-secure and don’t ask for unnecessary personally identifiable information, such as credit check information.
- Ensure that all the products that you advertise are available for either door-to-door or collection-point delivery in your targeted countries. All the advertisers who are active on local inventory ads, and offer the ability to collect in-shop on their product landing page, are eligible for shop collection or collection points as long as they meet the technical requirements. Learn more about Delivery
[delivery]
.- Based on country, you may submit the delivery cost to a collection point for specific carriers:
- Norway and Sweden: PostNord, DHL, Bring, Schenke
- Finland: Posti.fi, DHL, Bring, Schenke, Matkahuolto
- You may submit the delivery cost to a collection point or shop collection in Argentina and Chile.
- Based on country, you may submit the delivery cost to a collection point for specific carriers:
- Use regional availability. If you only target certain locations within a country or have different availability per region, use regional availability or exclude regions in your delivery settings so that your product availability at checkout matches the product available in your data source.
Provide accurate pricing
People expect to pay the advertised price for your products. If the price of a product advertised in a Shopping ad or free product listing is different from the price shown in a customer’s shopping basket, this could create a negative customer experience and result in a loss of a sale.
To ensure that your product's price is clear, follow these requirements:
- The price of your product should be consistent throughout the checkout process, not just between the product feed and your landing page. The price shouldn’t increase at checkout, but if a promotion is added, it may be reduced after the product is added to the basket.
- Any additional fees charged during checkout must be disclosed in Merchant Center by bundling them with the applicable delivery costs. For example, service fees, handling fees, carrier-related fees and state fees must be included in the total value submitted in the delivery
[delivery]
attribute or using the Merchant Center delivery services. - Many countries, such as Argentina, Brazil and Italy, require a value-added tax (VAT), which must be included in your price
[price]
attribute. - For the US, sales tax must be clearly stated in the feed attributes or in your account-level settings. Overestimating sales tax in Merchant Center is allowed, but taxes can’t be higher at checkout than those listed in Merchant Center.
- For the state of Colorado in the US, don’t include any retail delivery fee in your product feed. Therefore, a retail delivery fee shouldn’t be included in the delivery
[delivery]
, price[price]
, tax[tax]
or any other attribute. Learn more about the Colorado retail delivery fee. - Delivery costs are submitted separately, either in your feed or at the account level. Note that feed-level rates will override account-level settings. You can overestimate delivery rates in the Merchant Center as long as they're not higher on your website at checkout.
- If you require a minimum basket amount for a customer to qualify for free delivery, ensure that you set up your delivery settings on the account level and use the 'free delivery over a certain amount' option.
- If you charge a minimum basket amount surcharge on top of the delivery cost, ensure that the surcharge is included in your delivery settings. It's recommended that you use the range-based delivery setup.
- Collection points must be third-party locations that are accessible to other retailers and in close proximity to a shopper's location. Parcel lockers are a common type of collection point.
If you're selling products with minimum advertised pricing (MAP) agreements:
- Submit the MAP value as the 'price' in your product data if you sell the product for less than the price allowed by third-party agreements.
- Show the MAP price on your product landing page. You can show that you charge a lower price at checkout by adding clarifying text to your product pages. For example, you could display a note, such as 'Add to basket for final price', and show the MAP value crossed out or greyed out. The MAP price in your product data must show on the landing page. Learn more About landing page requirements.
- If you use microdata annotations on your website, also include the MAP price.
Be consistent with currency
Unless you have currency conversion enabled in your feed, your shopping pages should display the currency for the country that you're targeting. All pages from the product page to the checkout page should consistently display the same currency. Learn more About currency conversions.
Use language consistently
You should use the same language in the product feed and landing page, or your performance may be limited.
You must use the same language in the product feed and throughout the checkout process, or your product may be disapproved. For example, if you're targeting Canada, you may use English or French, but the language used to upload the feed must be the same as that used throughout the checkout process.
When key elements, such as title, description and variant information, do not match your product data language, your products might have limited performance. This is because the information provided does not match a user’s search terms and expectations in a given language. Your products may be disapproved if the majority of your product data does not match the feed language.
Elements of the checkout process that enable the user to navigate and make an informed purchase decision must be in the same language as your feed language.
Relevant pages include (but aren't limited to):
- Shopping basket
- Checkout
- Terms and Conditions
- Refund and return policy
- About (including your contact details)
Learn more about Supported languages and currencies.
Provide relevant information
Make sure that relevant information is easy to access throughout the checkout process, and that customers can easily find information on the refund and return policy, Terms and Conditions and how to contact you. You need to provide customers with a way to contact you on your website. Examples include a 'Contact us' form, a link to your business profile on social media, an email address or a phone number.
The omission of relevant information is considered a misrepresentation. Failure to comply with Shopping ads policies can result in your ads and listings being disapproved or your account being suspended.
Collect user information responsibly and securely
During the checkout process, you should gather only the necessary information to process the order. For example, a company name shouldn’t be required for customer sales. However, some countries may require the buyer to provide a national ID. These requirements vary by country. Learn more about Irresponsible data collection and use.
Be careful with the information that you collect from your customers. Your site's primary purpose shouldn't be to collect customers' personal information. Ensure that you follow these requirements:
- Collect personal information, such as credit card numbers, securely on an SSL-protected page.
- Don't sell your customers' contact information.
- Don't use customers’ personal information or images in ads without their consent