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    Meta is on track to overtake Google in global ad revenue for the first time

    Meta overtaking Google in ad revenue, reflects a broader shift toward platforms built for automation and measurable performance.

    A major shift is underway in digital advertising: Meta Platforms is projected to generate more ad revenue than Google in 2026, signaling how marketers are increasingly favoring automated, performance-driven platforms.

    Driving the news. According to Emarketer, Meta is expected to bring in $243.46 billion in global ad revenue this year, narrowly topping Google’s projected $239.54 billion.

    • Meta is forecast to capture 26.8% of global ad spend.
    • Google is projected to take 26.4%.
    • It would be the first time Google has lost the top spot in digital ad revenue.

    Why we care. Meta’s growth suggests brands are getting more value from automated, performance-focused tools, which could influence how they split budgets between Meta and Google. It’s also a reminder that platform dynamics are changing fast, so media strategies need to stay flexible.

    Catch up quick: Google has long dominated digital advertising through Search ads, Display ads across the web, and YouTube.

    But its core ad business is growing more slowly than in previous years.

    Meanwhile, Meta has benefited from AI-powered ad automation, stronger performance measurement tools, and continued scale across Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp.

    Why Meta is winning now. Advertisers are increasingly prioritizing platforms that can deliver both reach and measurable return.

    Meta’s advantage has been its ability to automate creative and targeting faster, optimize campaigns with less manual input, and make it easier for brands to prove ROI.

    That’s especially appealing in a tighter economic environment where marketers are under pressure to do more with less.

    Yes, but. Google is still enormous — and still growing.

    Its search business remains one of the most profitable ad engines in the world, and YouTube continues to attract brand budgets. But the company faces more pressure from, AI search disruption, antitrust scrutiny, and slowing growth in traditional search advertising.

    The bottom line. Meta passing Google in ad revenue would mark more than a symbolic milestone — it reflects a broader power shift toward platforms that make advertising easier to automate, measure, and scale.


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    About the Author

    Anu Adegbola

    Anu Adegbola

    Anu Adegbola has been Paid Media Editor of Search Engine Land since 2024. She covers paid search, paid social, retail media, video and more.

    In 2008, Anu started her career delivering digital marketing campaigns (mostly but not exclusively Paid Search) by building strategies, maximising ROI, automating repetitive processes and bringing efficiency from every part of marketing departments through inspiring leadership both on agency, client and marketing tech side. Outside editing Search Engine Land article she is the founder of PPC networking event - PPC Live and host of weekly podcast PPC Live The Podcast.
    She is also an international speaker with some of the stages she has presented on being SMX (US, UK, Munich, Berlin), Friends of Search (Amsterdam, NL), brightonSEO, The Marketing Meetup, HeroConf (PPC Hero), SearchLove, BiddableWorld, SESLondon, PPC Chat Live, AdWorld Experience (Bologna, IT) and more.