A quiet policy update from Google may signal a bigger shift in how search ads are built and delivered.

Effective March 17, 2026, Google officially discontinued several long-standing ad format policy sections, including:

  • Form ad requirements
  • Image quality requirements
  • Responsive ad requirements
  • Text ad requirements

According to Google, these policies were removed because the products they governed have “evolved into newer Google products,” making the original requirements obsolete.

At first glance, this might seem like a routine documentation cleanup. But the removal of Responsive ad requirements and Text ad requirements policies raises an interesting question:

Is Google slowly moving away from ad copy as we know it?

A Shift Toward Fluid, AI-Driven Ad Formats

For years, search advertising revolved around manually written ad copy.

Advertisers structured campaigns around:

  • Keywords
  • Headlines
  • Descriptions
  • Clear messaging control

But recent developments suggest Google may be moving toward more fluid, asset-driven ad formats where messaging is assembled dynamically by Google AI.

We’re already seeing pieces of this shift across multiple products:

  • AI Max generating headlines from website content
  • Performance Max assembling creative from assets
  • Demand Gen formats prioritizing visual and interactive elements
  • Local ads emphasizing links and actions over headlines

Instead of fixed ads written by advertisers, Google is increasingly building adaptive ad experiences where components are pulled from various sources.

Why This Matters

If search ads move toward a more dynamic, asset-based structure, the role of traditional copywriting could change significantly.

Rather than crafting a single message that appears consistently, advertisers may need to focus on building strong asset ecosystems that Google can draw from, including:

  • Strong and relevant text assets
  • Media assets like images and video
  • Website and business profile content

Our Take

Google’s direction in recent times has been clear:

More automation, more AI, and fewer rigid ad formats.

Removing formal policy requirements around traditional text ads suggests Google may be preparing for a future where ads are assembled dynamically rather than written line-by-line.

That doesn’t mean traditional search ads disappear soon. But it does suggest the system is gradually shifting toward flexible ad experiences that pull from multiple signals rather than relying on static ad copy.

For advertisers who rely on precise messaging—like law firms—that change could have significant implications.

What ADSQUIRE Is Doing

While the industry evolves, we’re maintaining the strategies that deliver strong performance today while preparing for what may come next.

Continuing With RSAs

  • Running Responsive Search Ads as the core search format
  • Maintaining control over messaging and structure for better CTRs and lead quality

Monitoring Platform Changes

  • Tracking policy updates and documentation changes
  • Watching for any official announcements about ad format shifts or sunset timelines

Preparing for Asset-Based Advertising

  • Focusing on assets including callouts, structured snippets, and more
  • Ensuring website and landing page messaging is clear and aligned with campaign goals

Staying Ahead of Automation Trends

  • Evaluating how dynamic formats like AI Max and other AI-driven ads behave in real campaigns
  • Identifying where we must bend the knee to automation—and where the messaging risk is too high to test

Bottom Line

Google search advertising has always evolved, but recent changes suggest the next phase may be less about writing ads and more about building ecosystems of assets that Google can dynamically assemble.

For now, Responsive Search Ads remain the best way to maintain messaging control, and convert better than their AI-driven counterparts, so we’re continuing to rely on them heavily.

But as Google’s ad formats become more fluid and automation-driven, keeping a close eye on these shifts will be essential.

At ADSQUIRE, we’re watching carefully—so when the next major change arrives, our clients are ready before the rest of the market catches up.

We’re currently seeing some surprisingly strong engagement signals coming from Demand Gen campaigns across select accounts.

Google is continuing to blur the lines between search, AI, and local listings.

Google has officially added Search Partners as a visible segment inside Performance Max channel reporting.

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