📅 Published: June 19, 2026 | Last Updated: June 19, 2026 | By Sarower Kaynath
Why Consent Mode v2 Is Not Optional in 2026
If your website serves users in the European Economic Area and you run Google Ads campaigns or use Google Analytics, Consent Mode v2 is not a technical nicety. It is a regulatory and commercial requirement. Google made Consent Mode v2 mandatory for EEA advertisers using Enhanced Conversions and Audience features in March 2024. Sites that did not implement it lost access to these features for EEA users, directly impacting campaign performance and attribution accuracy.
Beyond the regulatory requirement, Consent Mode v2 provides a commercial benefit: it enables Google behavioural modelling to estimate conversions from users who declined tracking consent. Without modelling, you simply have a blind spot. With Consent Mode v2 and modelling enabled, Google can fill that blind spot with statistically accurate estimates, giving your bidding algorithms better data to work with even in a consent-restricted environment.
How Consent Mode v2 Works Technically
Consent Mode v2 operates through a set of consent signals that your cookie consent banner sends to Google Tag Manager based on user consent choices. The four signals are analytics_storage, ad_storage, ad_user_data, and ad_personalization. When a user declines consent, the relevant signals are set to denied. Google tags still fire in a cookieless, privacy-safe mode, sending no personally identifiable data but allowing aggregate modelling signals to be recorded.
Implementation requires two components working together: a Google-certified Consent Management Platform that sends the correct consent signals to GTM, and Google Tag Manager configured with the Consent Initialisation trigger that fires consent signals before any other tags execute. The CMP must be certified by Google to ensure its signals are correctly formatted for Consent Mode. A list of certified CMPs is available in Google Analytics support documentation.
Basic vs Advanced Consent Mode Implementation
Consent Mode v2 has two implementation levels. Basic Consent Mode prevents all Google tags from firing until the user makes a consent choice, then fires them with the appropriate signal state. This is the simpler implementation but provides no modelling data because Google receives no signals from non-consenting users.
Advanced Consent Mode allows Google tags to fire immediately in a cookieless mode for all users, regardless of consent state. Non-consenting users contribute aggregate modelling signals without any personal data being collected. This implementation provides Google with the data it needs for behavioural modelling, which significantly improves conversion reporting accuracy and Smart Bidding performance for EEA traffic. For most advertisers running significant EEA traffic, Advanced Consent Mode is the commercially correct choice. This decision directly affects the quality of your conversion tracking and campaign measurement infrastructure.
The Impact on Google Ads Campaign Performance
The commercial impact of correct Consent Mode v2 implementation is measurable and significant. Smart Bidding strategies including Target CPA and Target ROAS rely on conversion data to optimise bidding decisions. When Consent Mode v2 is correctly implemented with Advanced mode and modelling enabled, the conversion data available to Smart Bidding is more complete and more accurate than without it. Advertisers who upgraded to v2 with Advanced mode consistently reported improvements in Smart Bidding performance for EEA campaigns, particularly in markets with high consent decline rates like Germany and France.
Enhanced Conversions, which improves attribution accuracy by matching hashed customer data to Google accounts, requires Consent Mode v2 ad_user_data and ad_personalization signals to be sent with customer data. Without these signals set correctly, Enhanced Conversions does not function for users who have not granted the appropriate consent, removing one of the most powerful attribution accuracy improvements available in Google Ads campaign management.
Frequently Asked Questions About Consent Mode v2
What is Consent Mode v2 and how is it different from v1?
Consent Mode v2 introduced two new consent signals, ad_user_data and ad_personalization, in addition to the original analytics_storage and ad_storage signals. These new signals are required by Google for advertisers using Enhanced Conversions and Audience features in EEA markets, reflecting the additional requirements of the Digital Markets Act.
Is Consent Mode v2 required for all websites?
It is required for websites using Google Ads or Google Analytics that serve users in the European Economic Area. Without it, Enhanced Conversions and remarketing audiences stop functioning correctly for EEA users. Non-EEA websites are not legally required to implement it but may benefit from the modelling capabilities it enables.
Does Consent Mode v2 affect conversion tracking accuracy?
Consent Mode v2 uses behavioural modelling to fill gaps where users decline tracking consent. Google modelling estimates conversions that would have been recorded if consent had been given, providing more accurate aggregate conversion data than simply excluding non-consenting users entirely. Advanced mode implementation provides better modelling accuracy than Basic mode.
Is Your EEA Tracking Consent-Compliant?
Digibic implements complete Consent Mode v2 setups with certified CMPs, Advanced mode configuration, and Enhanced Conversions integration. Get a free audit to ensure your tracking is compliant and complete.
Sarower Kaynath
Lead Digital Marketing Expert | Founder, Digibic
Sarower specialises in Technical SEO, AEO, Google Ads, and data-driven digital strategy across Ireland, South Africa, USA, Poland, and Australia.

