You've launched your Google Ads campaign with a smart bidding strategy, expecting Google to optimize your results automatically. But instead of seeing improved performance, you notice a yellow warning icon next to your bid strategy status. The message reads "Limited by bid strategy" -- and suddenly your automated bidding isn't so automated after all.
This status indicator is Google's way of communicating that your bid settings are creating artificial ceilings that prevent the algorithm from delivering its best performance. Rather than ignoring your constraints, Google displays this status to help you understand where your campaign's potential is being capped. Understanding what triggers this limitation, and more importantly, how to address it, is essential for maximizing your paid advertising ROI.
In this guide, we'll explain exactly what "Limited by bid strategy" means, explore the six most common triggers, provide specific fixes with real-world examples, and share best practices for keeping your bid strategies healthy and performing at their full potential.
Bid Strategy Health at a Glance
6
Common Triggers
20-30%
Recommended Target CPA Buffer
30-50
Monthly Conversions Needed for Smart Bidding
10x
Minimum Budget to Target CPA Ratio
What Does "Limited by Bid Strategy" Mean?
When you see "Limited by bid strategy" in your Google Ads account, it indicates that your automated bidding system wants to deliver more results for your campaigns but cannot do so within the parameters you've established. This isn't a technical error or a system failure -- it's a signal that your bid constraints are actively preventing the algorithm from optimizing toward your stated goals.
According to Google's official documentation, this status indicates that your bid settings are limiting the algorithm's ability to compete effectively in auctions. Understanding this status requires recognizing how Smart Bidding works. Google's automated bidding uses machine learning to analyze countless signals in real-time -- user location, device, time of day, search context, and more -- to determine the optimal bid for each auction. The algorithm is designed to find opportunities that maximize your target outcome (conversions, conversion value, clicks, etc.) within the constraints you specify.
When those constraints are too restrictive, the algorithm essentially has its hands tied. It identifies auction opportunities that could drive conversions, but cannot bid enough to compete effectively. The result is a campaign that underperforms relative to its potential, with Google alerting you to the limitation through this status indicator.
Why This Status Matters for Campaign Performance
The implications of this status extend beyond a simple warning icon. When your bid strategy is limited, you're likely experiencing some combination of reduced impression share, lower top-of-page placement rates, missed conversion opportunities, and inefficient budget utilization. The algorithm cannot spread your budget across the most valuable opportunities when bid caps prevent it from competing in high-value auctions.
For advertisers focused on efficiency metrics like CPA, ROAS, or CAC, a limited bid strategy means you're potentially overspending on the conversions you do get while missing entirely on conversions you could have captured with slightly more flexible bidding. This creates a double inefficiency that undermines the core promise of Smart Bidding.
Our paid advertising services help advertisers identify and resolve these constraints to maximize campaign performance.
The Six Common Triggers of "Limited by Bid Strategy" Status
1. Target CPA Set Too Low
The most frequent cause of "Limited by bid strategy" is a Target CPA (Cost Per Acquisition) that's set below what your actual conversion data supports. When you set a Target CPA, you're telling Google: "I want to pay no more than X dollars for each conversion." Google's algorithm then works to find conversions at or below that cost.
The problem arises when your Target CPA is set so low that the algorithm cannot find enough conversion opportunities within that price range. Google's system is designed to respect your constraint rather than exceed it, so it limits bidding to stay under your target -- often at the cost of overall conversion volume.
Example: If your campaigns are consistently generating conversions at $50 but you set a Target CPA of $25, Google cannot deliver conversions at half your actual cost. The algorithm will compete only in auctions where it predicts conversions below $25 are possible, which significantly narrows your reach and typically results in dramatically reduced conversion volume.
Fix: Set your Target CPA 20-30% above your actual average CPA. If your actual CPA is $50, start with a Target CPA of $60-65.
2. Target ROAS Set Too High
Similar to Target CPA limitations, Target ROAS (Return on Ad Spend) constraints can trigger the "Limited by bid strategy" status when goals are set above what your data supports. When you set a Target ROAS, you're establishing a minimum return ratio you want to achieve -- for instance, a 400% Target ROAS means you want to generate $4 in revenue for every $1 spent on advertising.
If your actual ROAS is 300% but you set a 500% Target ROAS, Google cannot achieve your goal without sacrificing conversion volume. The algorithm will bid conservatively to protect your ROAS target, potentially missing high-value opportunities that would contribute positively to overall revenue.
Fix: Set Target ROAS 10-20% below your achieved ROAS. If you're generating $3.50 in revenue for every $1 spent (350% ROAS), a reasonable Target ROAS would be 300-325%.
3. Maximum CPC Bids Set Too Low
When using Smart Bidding strategies with individual keyword or ad group-level maximum CPC (Cost Per Click) caps, these limits can constrain the algorithm's ability to compete effectively in valuable auctions. Smart Bidding optimizes for conversions or conversion value, not clicks -- meaning it may need to bid higher than your manual CPC maximum to win auctions where conversion likelihood is high.
Fix: Ensure your maximum CPC is at least 150-200% of your 75th percentile CPC to provide headroom for the algorithm to compete when necessary.
4. Daily Budget Too Low for Smart Bidding
Insufficient budget is another common trigger. When your daily budget is too low relative to your target CPA and conversion volume goals, Google may show "Limited by bid strategy" because the budget prevents the algorithm from optimizing toward your stated objectives.
Fix: Ensure your daily budget is at least 10 times your Target CPA. A $50 Target CPA requires a minimum $500 daily budget for effective Smart Bidding.
5. Insufficient Conversion Volume
Smart Bidding requires historical conversion data to make effective optimization decisions. When you don't have enough conversions -- typically needing 30-50 conversions per month -- Google cannot reliably predict which auctions are most likely to convert.
Fix: Temporarily use Maximize Conversions bidding, broaden targeting, and ensure conversion tracking captures sufficient data. Build to 30-50 conversions/month before using Target CPA or tROAS.
6. Overly Restrictive Bidding Rules
Custom bidding rules that adjust bids based on specific conditions can constrain Smart Bidding in ways that trigger the "Limited by bid strategy" status. Rules that broadly reduce bids often do more harm than good.
Fix: Audit custom bidding rules and eliminate those that conflict with Smart Bidding optimization goals.
Related reading: Learn about high-converting PPC landing page tips to maximize the value of your paid traffic once bid constraints are resolved.
How to Fix Each Trigger: Practical Solutions
Raising Your Target CPA Effectively
When your Target CPA is triggering the "Limited by bid strategy" status, the solution involves a strategic adjustment rather than simply accepting higher costs:
- Calculate your actual average CPA from the past 30 days of conversion data
- Set your Target CPA at 20-30% above this baseline (e.g., $50 actual CPA → $60-65 Target CPA)
- Allow 7-14 days for the algorithm to recalibrate
- Monitor conversion volume and CPA during this period
Adjusting Target ROAS for E-commerce Campaigns
For e-commerce advertisers using Target ROAS:
- Analyze your achieved ROAS over the past 30-60 days
- Set your initial Target ROAS at 10-20% below your achieved ROAS
- Monitor both ROAS and total conversion value
- Optimize for revenue within acceptable return parameters
Optimizing Maximum CPC Settings
To address maximum CPC limitations:
- Analyze your 75th percentile CPC (not average)
- Set maximum CPC at 150-200% of this value
- Consider removing maximum CPC caps entirely for Smart Bidding campaigns
- Use campaign-level budgets as guardrails instead
Ensuring Adequate Budget for Smart Bidding
Proper budget allocation requires:
- Target CPA × desired daily conversions = minimum budget
- Add 20-30% buffer for day-parting variation
- Monitor daily spend relative to budget
- Increase budget if consistently hitting cap before day's end
Building Conversion Volume for Data-Starved Campaigns
For new campaigns without sufficient conversion history:
- Temporarily switch to Maximize Conversions bidding
- Broaden targeting to expand conversion opportunities
- Implement multiple conversion actions at different funnel stages
- Target 30-50 conversions per month before transitioning to Target CPA
Reviewing and Refining Bidding Rules
Audit custom bidding rules by asking:
- Does this rule support or conflict with my Smart Bidding strategy?
- What percentage of auctions does this rule affect?
- Is the rule based on current performance data?
Eliminate broadly restrictive rules and retain strategic guidance.
For advertisers exploring advanced bidding capabilities, learn about Google Releases Target Impression Share as an alternative Smart Bidding strategy for brand awareness campaigns.
Best Practices for Bid Strategy Configuration
Allow Adequate Learning Time
When implementing new bid strategies or making significant changes, allow 7-14 days for the algorithm to gather data and optimize before evaluating performance. During the learning period, the algorithm is actively testing bid variations and learning which auction-time signals correlate with conversions.
Avoid making multiple simultaneous changes during this period, as this restarts the learning process. Implement changes sequentially with at least one week between adjustments.
Monitor the Right Metrics
Track these metrics to assess bid strategy health:
Search Lost Impression Share (Rank): Indicates auctions you didn't compete in due to bid constraints. High Lost IS (Rank) signals maximum bids or Target CPA/ROAS are too restrictive. Above 10-15% indicates optimization opportunity.
Search Lost Impression Share (Budget): Shows auction exclusions due to budget constraints. Helps distinguish between bid-related and budget-related limitations.
Conversion Volume Trends: Stable or increasing volume with consistent CPA/ROAS suggests healthy optimization. Declining volume with stable efficiency may indicate bid constraints.
Top-of-Page Rates: If impression share is healthy but top-of-page rates are low, bid adjustments can improve visibility.
Use Portfolio Bid Strategies for Scale
Portfolio bid strategies allow Google to optimize across multiple campaigns, finding efficiency gains that individual campaign optimization might miss. Implement for campaigns with similar conversion goals and sufficient combined volume (50+ conversions/month).
Conduct Regular Bid Strategy Audits
Establish a monthly cadence for bid strategy review:
- Verify Target CPA/ROAS settings align with current performance data
- Ensure maximum CPC caps haven't become outdated
- Confirm budgets provide sufficient headroom
- Validate conversion volume remains adequate
Test Before Scaling
Use Google Ads' built-in experiments to test changes at reduced scale:
- Structure experiments to isolate specific changes
- Run for 2-4 weeks to account for weekly variation
- Use results to inform broader campaign updates
- Document changes and their impact for future reference
Discover how proper bid strategy configuration connects with impression share PPC performance metrics for comprehensive campaign optimization.
Key Metrics to Track and Optimize
Search Lost Impression Share Analysis
Lost IS (Rank): Auctions you didn't enter due to bid constraints. High values indicate bid-related limitations.
Lost IS (Budget): Auctions you didn't enter due to budget exhaustion. High values indicate budget constraints.
When Lost IS (Rank) is high and Lost IS (Budget) is low, focus on adjusting bids. When Lost IS (Budget) is high, evaluate budget levels or efficiency targets.
Conversion Rate and Quality Assessment
Don't optimize for conversion quantity at the expense of conversion quality. Monitor:
- Lead quality score
- Customer acquisition cost
- Lifetime value
- Post-click engagement metrics
A bid strategy change that increases conversions but degrades lead quality may not be a genuine improvement.
Competitive Positioning Metrics
Use auction-time insights to analyze:
Impression Share: Your share of total available impressions Overlap Rate: Percentage of your auctions that also include competitor impressions Outranking Share: How often you rank above specific competitors
Declining outranking share suggests bid positioning has weakened relative to competitive pressure.
Table: Key Metrics and What They Tell You
| Metric | What It Measures | Action When High | Action When Low |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lost IS (Rank) | Bid-related auction exclusions | Raise Target CPA/CPC | No action needed |
| Lost IS (Budget) | Budget-related exclusions | Increase budget or lower efficiency targets | No action needed |
| Impression Share | Overall auction participation | Expand targeting or raise bids | No action needed |
| Top of Page Rate | Visibility in prime positions | Maintain current approach | Increase bids |
| Conversion Volume | Total conversions generated | No action needed | Check bid/budget constraints |
Understanding these metrics helps you distinguish between different types of PPC zero click search challenges and adjust your bidding strategy accordingly.