Google AdSense rejects most first-time applications — not because the sites are bad, but because applicants don’t know what Google is specifically looking for. This guide covers what actually works based on current approval patterns in 2026.
What Google Actually Looks at When Reviewing Applications
- Content quality and originality: Google can detect thin, copied, or AI-generated content. Every page needs to be substantive and original.
- Site completeness: Does your site look like a real, legitimate publication with multiple pages of real content?
- Navigation and user experience: Is the site easy to use? Do links work? Is there a clear structure?
- Required pages: Privacy Policy, About page, and Contact page are basically mandatory in 2026.
- Traffic: Google officially says no minimum traffic is needed. In practice, sites with very low or zero traffic get rejected far more often.
Minimum Content Requirements That Actually Work
- At least 20–25 published posts
- Each post should be 800+ words of original content
- Content focused around 1–3 specific topic areas
- No posts shorter than 500 words at application time
- No duplicate content
The Required Pages You Must Have
Privacy Policy
Non-negotiable. AdSense serves behavioral ads, requiring disclosure under GDPR and CCPA. Your policy needs to specifically mention Google AdSense and that it uses cookies for ad personalization. Free generators like PrivacyPolicyGenerator.info will produce something acceptable.
About Page
Explain who runs the site, what it’s about, and establish credibility. Include something specific: your background, experience with the topic, why you started the blog. “A passionate blogger sharing tips” with no other details is too thin.
Contact Page
A contact form or visible email address. Signals that you’re a real, accessible person or business. WPForms Lite takes 10 minutes to set up.
Technical Requirements
Custom Domain
AdSense does not approve sites on free subdomains like blogspot.com or wordpress.com. You need a custom domain (.com, .net, .org). A domain costs $10–15/year — this is not optional.
Site Must Be Publicly Accessible
No password protection, no “under construction” pages, no broken links in the main navigation.
Mobile Responsive Design
Your site must display properly on mobile. Verify with Google’s Mobile-Friendly Test tool before applying.
HTTPS (SSL Certificate)
Your site must be on HTTPS, not HTTP. Most hosting providers include free SSL certificates. If your site still shows HTTP, fix this before applying.
Content Policies: What Will Get You Rejected or Banned
- Adult content of any kind
- Content promoting violence, dangerous activities, or illegal products
- Copyright-infringing content (lyrics, scraped articles, unauthorized images)
- Content designed primarily to generate clicks rather than provide value
- Sites with deceptive navigation or that encourage accidental ad clicks
The Application Process Step by Step
- Go to adsense.google.com and click “Get Started”
- Sign in with the Google account you want AdSense linked to
- Enter your website URL
- Select your country and agree to the terms
- Paste the AdSense code snippet into your site’s <head> section
- Wait for review — typically 1–14 days
If You Get Rejected: What to Do
Don’t reapply immediately. Fix the specific issue, then wait at least 30 days before reapplying.
- “Insufficient content” → Add more posts. Aim for 30 posts at 1,000+ words each before reapplying.
- “Site not accessible” → Check for maintenance mode or robots.txt blocking.
- “Policy violations” → Review your content against AdSense policies and remove borderline material.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much traffic do I need for AdSense approval?
Officially, none. Practically, getting to 50–100 daily visitors before applying significantly improves approval odds.
Can I use AdSense on a new blog?
Yes, but most new blogs need 3–6 months of content building first. Applying too early is usually a waste of time.
How long does AdSense review take in 2026?
Typically 1–14 days. You’ll receive an email either way. If you’ve waited more than 2 weeks, check your spam folder.
Can I use other ad networks while waiting for AdSense approval?
Yes. Media.net, Ezoic, and Monumetric are alternatives with no traffic minimums that can generate revenue while your site grows.
What’s the difference between AdSense and Mediavine or AdThrive?
AdSense has no traffic minimum and pays less. Mediavine requires 50,000 sessions/month and pays 2–5x more. AdThrive requires 100,000 page views/month. Most serious bloggers aim to graduate from AdSense to Mediavine as traffic grows.

📚 Related Guides
- How to Start a Blog in 2026 — get your blog AdSense-ready
- Write Blog Posts That Rank — create content that meets AdSense standards
- Increase Blog Traffic in 2026 — get more visitors to your ads
- Best WordPress Plugins 2026 — speed and compliance tools
- Freelance Pricing Guide — diversify beyond AdSense