Google is rolling out mandatory verification for all financial advertisers across the European Union, marking its most aggressive push yet to clean up ad fraud in the region. The move, announced by VP Keerat Sharma, forces everyone from cryptocurrency exchanges to loan providers to prove their legitimacy before running ads – or get blocked. It’s a direct response to rising regulatory pressure and consumer complaints about scam financial ads flooding search results and YouTube.

Google just made life harder for scam artists – and legitimate financial advertisers alike. The company’s mandatory financial advertiser verification program, previously limited to select European markets, is now expanding to cover the entire EU, according to Keerat Sharma, VP and General Manager of Ads Privacy and Safety, in a company blog post.

The timing isn’t coincidental. European regulators have been breathing down big tech’s neck about fraudulent financial ads, particularly around cryptocurrency schemes and predatory lending. Under the Digital Services Act, platforms face hefty fines for failing to police harmful content – including scam advertisements that have cost consumers millions.

“We’re expanding its mandatory financial advertiser verification program across the EU to help people find services they can trust,” Sharma wrote. Translation: if you want to advertise loans, investment products, crypto services, or banking on Google Search, YouTube, or Display Network in Europe, you’ll need to prove you’re legitimate first.

The verification process requires advertisers to submit documentation proving they’re authorized to offer financial services in their target markets. That means regulatory licenses, business registration documents, and proof of compliance with local financial laws. Google reviews each application before granting approval – a process that can take weeks and has already frustrated some legitimate businesses caught in the verification backlog.

But the alternative is worse. Financial scams have exploded across digital advertising platforms, with fake investment schemes and fraudulent loan offers particularly prevalent. The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority reported that investment fraud via online ads cost British consumers over £570 million in 2024 alone. Now that problem is Google’s regulatory headache under EU law.

The expansion puts Google ahead of competitors like Meta, which has faced similar pressure but hasn’t implemented continent-wide financial advertiser verification. Meta’s approach has been more reactive – taking down fraudulent ads after complaints rather than preventing them upfront. That’s left the company vulnerable to regulatory action and consumer lawsuits across Europe.

For financial services companies, the new requirements mean additional operational overhead. Smaller fintech startups and cryptocurrency platforms – already struggling with complex EU regulatory frameworks – now face another barrier to customer acquisition. But consumer advocates are applauding the move as overdue protection against increasingly sophisticated fraud.

The program builds on verification systems Google already uses for political advertisers and healthcare providers. Those programs have had mixed results – they’ve reduced some fraud but created verification bottlenecks that delayed legitimate campaigns. Financial services verification will likely face similar growing pains as it scales across 27 EU member states, each with different regulatory frameworks.

What happens to advertisers who don’t comply? Their ads get pulled, potentially within days of the requirement taking effect in their market. Google hasn’t announced a specific rollout timeline for each EU country, but the company typically implements these changes in waves – starting with larger markets like Germany and France before expanding to smaller member states.

The verification mandate also reflects Google’s broader strategy of preemptive compliance with EU tech regulation. With the Digital Services Act enforcement ramping up and potential fines reaching 6% of global revenue, platforms are choosing to over-regulate rather than face Brussels’ wrath. That’s reshaping the entire digital advertising ecosystem across Europe, making it simultaneously safer for consumers and more expensive for advertisers.

Google’s EU-wide financial advertiser verification rollout is less about innovation and more about survival in an increasingly regulated digital landscape. For consumers, it means fewer scam ads cluttering search results. For legitimate financial services companies, it’s another compliance hurdle in an already complex market. And for Google, it’s the price of doing business in a region that’s decided tech platforms need adult supervision. The real test comes when verification backlogs hit and legitimate advertisers start missing revenue targets because their documentation is stuck in review – that’s when we’ll see if Google’s enforcement infrastructure can handle continent-scale verification without breaking the ads ecosystem it depends on.