If you are running multiple businesses out of a single Google Ads account, stop. It is not a clever shortcut. It is a structural problem that will eventually cost you, either through corrupted data, a suspended account, or both.
Your Conversion Tracking Becomes a Mess
When multiple businesses share one Google Ads account, your conversion tracking is fighting itself. Lead form submissions, phone calls, purchases all land in the same pool. Unless you are obsessively specific about which conversion goals are assigned to which campaigns, your optimisation signals are corrupted. Google’s Smart Bidding is learning from blended data that means nothing. You’re essentially teaching the algorithm to chase a ghost.
The only workaround is surgical precision with goal assignment at the campaign level, and even then, you’re one misconfiguration away from a reporting disaster.
You’re Gambling With Account-Level Risk
This is the part most people don’t think about until it’s too late.
Google Ads has an account-level blacklisting system. If you accumulate too many ad disapprovals, policy violations, or strikes, Google can suspend the entire account. Not just the offending campaign. The entire account.
Now think about what that means when you’re running a conservative, low-risk business alongside a business that operates in a sensitive category, supplements, financial services, legal, anything that regularly triggers Google’s policy engine. One bad run of disapprovals on the difficult business and your safe, well-performing campaigns go dark with it. You’ve let one business hold another hostage.
The Correct Structure: A Google Ads MCC
The right way to manage multiple businesses under Google Ads is through a My Client Center account, commonly called an MCC.
An MCC is a manager account that sits above individual Google Ads accounts. Each business gets its own account, its own conversion tracking, its own billing, and its own policy history. From the MCC dashboard, you have full visibility and control across all of them without the accounts being entangled.
The benefits are straightforward:
- Isolated risk. A suspension or policy strike on one account does not touch the others.
- Clean conversion data. Each business tracks its own goals independently with no cross-contamination.
- Controlled spend. You can set spend limits per account and manage budgets without campaigns competing for the same billing threshold.
- Scalability. Adding a new business means creating a new account under the MCC, not cramming more campaigns into an already complex structure.
Setting One Up Is Not Complicated
Creating an MCC takes minutes. At the time of writing, you can create a manager account by visiting https://business.google.com/en-all/ad-tools/manage-accounts/. From there, either create new sub-accounts or link existing ones. If you already have standalone accounts running, you can request access to link them under the MCC without losing any historical data.
If you are currently running two or more businesses out of a single account, restructuring into an MCC is not optional. It is overdue.

