You sell a legal product that people actively search for every single day. Someone in your zip code is Googling "bourbon near me" right now. Paid search should be a no-brainer for your liquor store — and it can be, as long as you don't get your ad account shut down first.
That's the tension every liquor store owner faces with Google Ads. The opportunity is massive: high-intent local buyers, ready to purchase, searching for exactly what's on your shelves. But the Google alcohol advertising policy is one of the strictest category restrictions on the platform, and Google enforces it aggressively. One misstep — a careless phrase in your ad copy, a landing page that hasn't been audited, a targeting setting left on default — and you're not looking at a warning. You're looking at a suspended account and weeks of lost revenue.
This guide walks you through everything you need to run compliant, profitable paid search campaigns for your liquor store. No agency jargon, no hand-waving. Just the specific rules, settings, and strategies that keep your ads live and your register ringing.
Google Allows Alcohol Ads — But the Rules Are Strict and Getting Stricter
Google permits alcohol ads under strict conditions tied to local laws, age-targeting requirements, content guidelines, and industry standards. This isn't a free-for-all. Advertisers must verify that their target geography actually permits alcohol ads before launching campaigns — rules vary significantly by country and even by state.
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And Google's automated review doesn't stop at your ad copy. It crawls your entire landing page — every word, every image, every product listing. Advertisers report getting flagged on campaigns with zero alcohol-related keywords simply because their landing page sold or mentioned alcohol. Google evaluates the full user journey, not just your headline.
What Changed Recently — and Why It Matters
In early 2026, Google updated its policies around alcohol, prescription drugs, gambling, and government advertising — signaling increased enforcement activity. [VERIFY: Confirm the specific timing and scope of this 2026 policy update.] If you set up your campaigns even a year ago, your compliance assumptions may already be outdated.
Meanwhile, celebrity-owned alcohol brands flooding YouTube Shorts have drawn regulatory scrutiny around advertising to younger audiences, a trend likely to push Google's policies even tighter.
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Bottom line: what worked in 2024 might get you flagged today. Let's break down the two foundational rules that every alcohol advertiser on Google must follow — no exceptions.
Google's Two Non-Negotiable Rules for Alcohol Advertising
Before you touch a single campaign setting, you need to understand this: the Google alcohol advertising policy rests on two pillars that apply everywhere, to everyone, no exceptions. Get these wrong and your ads don't just get disapproved — your account can get suspended.
Rule 1: Never Target Minors
In practice, this means more than just not checking a box that says "teenagers." Google requires age-gating on landing pages in many countries, restricts audience targeting to users who meet the legal drinking age for their geography, and blocks alcohol ads from appearing on content primarily consumed by minors.
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Here's where it gets tricky: enforcement varies by country. You need to verify your target geography even permits alcohol ads before launching. And with regulatory scrutiny intensifying around alcohol advertising to younger audiences, even small local stores running paid search ads are caught in the same net as the big brands.
Rule 2: Never Promote Harmful or Irresponsible Consumption
Google considers these red flags: ads implying health or social benefits from drinking, promoting excessive consumption, or encouraging illegal alcohol use.
The difference comes down to tone and word choice. Compare these:
- ✅ "Celebrate responsibly with our curated wine selection" — compliant, measured, product-focused.
- ❌ "Get the party started — cheap vodka deals!" — implies excess, could get flagged.
Those two rules sound straightforward enough. But here's where most liquor store owners get tripped up: they nail the ad copy and completely overlook what happens after the click.
