Mumbai, India
Free Resource

Google Ads Negative Keyword List: 200+ Words Organized by Category and Industry

A ready-to-use Google Ads negative keyword list with 50+ universal negatives and industry-specific lists for ecommerce, SaaS, local services, healthcare, and real estate. Copy, paste, and stop wasting budget on irrelevant clicks.

Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 14 min

Contents

What’s in this list

  1. What Are Negative Keywords
  2. Universal Negative Keywords (50+)
  3. Ecommerce Negative Keywords
  4. SaaS Negative Keywords
  5. Local Services Negative Keywords
  6. Healthcare Negative Keywords
  7. Real Estate Negative Keywords
  8. How to Add Negative Keywords
  9. Key Patterns Across Industries
Overview

What are negative keywords in Google Ads?

Negative keywords are search terms you tell Google Ads to exclude from triggering your ads. They prevent your ads from showing when someone searches for something irrelevant to your business. Without negative keywords, a law firm bidding on “personal injury lawyer” could show ads to someone searching “personal injury lawyer salary” or “how to become a personal injury lawyer.” Neither of those searchers will ever become a client.

Negative keyword: A word or phrase added to a Google Ads campaign that prevents your ad from showing when that term appears in a search query.

WordStream’s 2024 analysis of 2,000+ Google Ads accounts found that the average account wastes 76% of its budget on search terms that never convert. Most of that waste is preventable with a well-maintained negative keyword list. The lists below are built from our analysis of search term reports across 200+ client accounts at ScaleGrowth.Digital since 2022.

How we selected these negative keywords

Every negative keyword in this list meets two criteria: (1) it appeared in real search term reports across multiple accounts, and (2) it consistently produced clicks with zero conversions. We organized them by intent category so you can apply the ones relevant to your business and skip the rest. These aren’t theoretical. They’re from real money wasted on real accounts.

Universal

What universal negative keywords should every account have?

These 50+ negative keywords apply to virtually every Google Ads account regardless of industry. They filter out job seekers, freebie hunters, students, and other non-buyer intent. Add these to your account-level negative keyword list on day one.

Job Seeker Terms (13 keywords)

People searching for jobs, not your products or services. These terms generate high click volumes with zero commercial intent.

# Negative Keyword Match Type Why
1 jobs Phrase Job seekers, not buyers
2 careers Phrase Employment searchers
3 salary Phrase Compensation research
4 hiring Phrase Employment intent
5 job opening Phrase Employment intent
6 internship Phrase Student/intern seekers
7 resume Phrase Job application intent
8 interview questions Phrase Job interview prep
9 glassdoor Phrase Employee reviews site
10 indeed Phrase Job board
11 linkedin Phrase Professional networking
12 work from home Phrase Remote job seekers
13 volunteer Phrase Unpaid positions

Free/DIY Terms (12 keywords)

People who want something for free. If you sell paid products or services, these terms burn budget on users who won’t convert.

# Negative Keyword Match Type Why
14 free Broad Zero purchase intent
15 cheap Phrase Bargain hunters, low LTV
16 DIY Phrase Self-service intent
17 do it yourself Phrase Self-service intent
18 homemade Phrase Not buying commercial product
19 open source Phrase Free software seekers
20 torrent Phrase Piracy intent
21 crack Phrase Software piracy
22 pirate Phrase Software piracy
23 discount code Phrase Coupon seekers already buying elsewhere
24 coupon Phrase Deal seekers, low margins
25 promo code Phrase Already decided, looking for savings

Education/Research Terms (12 keywords)

Students and researchers. They’ll click your ad, read your landing page, and never convert because they’re writing a paper, not making a purchase.

# Negative Keyword Match Type Why
26 what is Phrase Informational, not commercial
27 definition Phrase Dictionary lookup
28 tutorial Phrase Learning intent
29 course Phrase Education seekers
30 certification Phrase Professional development
31 degree Phrase Academic programs
32 university Phrase Academic research
33 college Phrase Academic context
34 homework Phrase Student assignments
35 thesis Phrase Academic writing
36 research paper Phrase Academic writing
37 PDF Phrase Document download, not purchase

Review/Comparison Terms (8 keywords)

People in research mode. They haven’t decided to buy yet and may never reach your landing page with purchase intent. Use cautiously: some of these are valid for remarketing campaigns.

# Negative Keyword Match Type Why
38 review Phrase Reading reviews, not buying
39 reviews Phrase Research phase
40 vs Phrase Comparison shopping
41 versus Phrase Comparison shopping
42 alternative Phrase Looking at competitors
43 alternatives Phrase Looking at competitors
44 complaint Phrase Negative sentiment
45 scam Phrase Trust issues, not buyers

Miscellaneous Non-Buyer Terms (8 keywords)

# Negative Keyword Match Type Why
46 meme Phrase Entertainment, not commercial
47 funny Phrase Entertainment intent
48 youtube Phrase Video platform, not your site
49 reddit Phrase Forum discussions
50 wikipedia Phrase Reference lookup
51 sample Phrase Free sample seekers
52 template Phrase Looking for free templates (unless you sell templates)
53 example Phrase Research, not purchase

Important note: “free” is set to broad match because it catches variations like “free trial,” “free download.” The rest use phrase match to avoid over-blocking. Always test negatives against your search terms report before adding them. A B2B SaaS company might want to keep “free trial” as a valid search term, so adjust accordingly.

Ecommerce

What negative keywords do ecommerce accounts need?

Ecommerce accounts have unique waste patterns. Shoppers search for products they want but often trigger your ads with terms that signal they want something different: used items, rental, wholesale pricing, or competitor-specific models. Here are 25 ecommerce-specific negatives beyond the universal list.

# Negative Keyword Why exclude
1 used Looking for secondhand, not new inventory
2 refurbished Wants refurbished, you sell new
3 second hand Used goods intent
4 rental Wants to rent, not buy
5 rent Rental intent
6 lease Leasing, not purchasing
7 wholesale Bulk pricing you don’t offer
8 bulk Wholesale volume seekers
9 repair Fixing existing product, not buying new
10 fix Repair intent
11 broken Repair/troubleshooting
12 manual Product manual lookup
13 instructions How-to, not purchasing
14 specs Research phase, comparing
15 dimensions Pre-purchase research (low conversion)
16 recall Product safety concern
17 lawsuit Legal action, not shopping
18 class action Legal, not commercial
19 return policy Post-purchase, already bought elsewhere
20 warranty claim Post-purchase support
21 clearance Bargain hunters (unless you run clearance)
22 knockoff Counterfeit product seekers
23 fake Counterfeit interest
24 dupe Looking for imitation products
25 amazon Platform-specific shoppers (unless you sell on Amazon)

Ecommerce accounts should also add competitor brand names as negatives if you’re running non-brand campaigns. Someone searching “Nike running shoes” while you sell Adidas won’t convert. We’ve seen competitor brand terms waste $2,000-5,000/month in mid-size ecommerce accounts.

SaaS

What negative keywords work best for SaaS accounts?

SaaS negative keywords focus on filtering out people who want free tools, open-source alternatives, or specific competitor products. The SaaS buyer journey is longer (avg. 14-day sales cycle for SMB, 60+ days for enterprise, per Gartner 2024), so you need to be more selective about which clicks you pay for.

# Negative Keyword Why exclude
1 login Existing users, not prospects
2 sign in Existing user navigation
3 password reset Existing user support
4 API Developer research (unless selling API)
5 documentation Existing users looking for docs
6 integration Pre-purchase research, low intent
7 plugin Looking for add-ons, not core product
8 open source Wants free alternative
9 self-hosted Wants to host own, not pay SaaS
10 free plan Won’t convert to paid (unless freemium)
11 lifetime deal AppSumo-style one-time buyers
12 download Desktop software, not SaaS
13 excel Spreadsheet approach, not SaaS
14 spreadsheet Manual approach
15 google sheets Free tool approach
16 how to build DIY developers
17 source code Building own, not buying
18 github Developer resources, not buyers
19 stack overflow Technical troubleshooting
20 cancel subscription Churn intent from existing customers

SaaS accounts should also negative match their own brand name in non-brand campaigns to avoid cross-campaign competition. Use an account audit to identify keyword duplication across campaigns.

Local Services

Which negative keywords matter for local service businesses?

Local service businesses (plumbers, electricians, lawyers, dentists, HVAC) pay some of the highest CPCs in Google Ads. A single click for “emergency plumber” can cost $40-80 in major metro areas, according to iSpionage’s 2024 CPC benchmarks. Every irrelevant click hurts. These negatives protect your budget from the most common local waste patterns.

# Negative Keyword Why exclude
1 near me jobs Job seekers in your area
2 schools Trade school research
3 training Certification programs
4 apprenticeship Career training
5 license Professional licensing research
6 insurance Insurance shopping, not service
7 franchise Business opportunity seekers
8 start a business Entrepreneurs, not customers
9 how to become Career research
10 how much does it cost to become Career cost research
11 association Professional associations
12 union Labor union research
13 average salary Employment research
14 home depot DIY shoppers
15 lowes DIY shoppers
16 supply store Buying supplies, not hiring
17 parts DIY repair parts
18 tools Equipment shopping
19 equipment Buying gear, not services
20 commercial Wrong segment (if you serve residential)
Healthcare

What negative keywords should healthcare advertisers use?

Healthcare Google Ads accounts face unique challenges. Medical queries mix patient intent with provider/career intent. Someone searching “dermatologist” might want an appointment, a career, or a definition. Healthcare CPCs average $3-8 but can hit $50+ for high-intent terms like “drug rehab near me” (Google Ads Benchmarks, 2024). These negatives filter out non-patient searches.

# Negative Keyword Why exclude
1 medical school Education, not patient
2 residency Medical training programs
3 fellowship Post-residency training
4 nursing Career/education path
5 symptoms Self-diagnosis, low booking rate
6 home remedy Self-treatment intent
7 natural cure Alternative medicine seekers
8 side effects Medication research, not provider
9 lawsuit Legal, not medical
10 malpractice Legal research
11 clinical trial Research participation
12 study Academic research
13 journal Medical publications
14 WebMD Self-diagnosis platform
15 Mayo Clinic Information site, competitor
16 images Medical image searches (often disturbing, never convert)
17 pictures Visual research
18 contagious Health anxiety, not booking
19 insurance accepted May be valid, but often low-intent browsing
20 medicaid Government insurance (if you don’t accept it)

Caution: “Symptoms” is a high-volume term that occasionally converts for urgent care and telehealth providers. Test before adding it globally. If your conversion data shows symptom searches converting at even 1-2%, keep them in a separate campaign with lower bids rather than blocking them entirely.

Real Estate

What negative keywords do real estate advertisers need?

Real estate accounts bleed money on two fronts: people looking at the wrong property type and people researching careers. The average real estate CPC ranges from $1.50 for general searches to $12+ for high-intent terms like “homes for sale in [city]” (LocaliQ, 2024). These negatives focus on filtering out non-buyer intent specific to real estate.

# Negative Keyword Why exclude
1 real estate license Career research
2 real estate exam Licensing exam prep
3 become a realtor Career path research
4 real estate agent salary Compensation research
5 commission Agent commission questions
6 zillow Portal-specific traffic
7 trulia Portal traffic
8 realtor.com Portal traffic
9 foreclosure Distressed property seekers (unless you specialize)
10 tax lien Investment/legal niche
11 section 8 Government housing (if not relevant)
12 public housing Government programs
13 mobile home Wrong property type (for standard realtors)
14 trailer park Wrong property type
15 timeshare Vacation ownership, different market
16 virtual tour Browsing, very low intent
17 floor plan Architectural interest, not buying
18 property tax Tax research, not purchase
19 HOA fees Research phase, rarely converts
20 moving company Post-purchase logistics
Implementation

How do you add negative keywords to Google Ads?

You can add negative keywords at two levels: campaign-level and account-level (via shared lists). Here’s the step-by-step process for both.

Account-Level Negative Keyword List (Recommended)

  1. Open Google Ads. Click Tools & Settings in the top menu.
  2. Under “Shared Library,” click Negative Keyword Lists.
  3. Click the blue + button to create a new list.
  4. Name it clearly: “Universal Negatives,” “Industry Negatives,” etc.
  5. Paste your negative keywords (one per line). Select phrase match by wrapping each in quotes, or leave as broad match.
  6. Save the list, then apply it to all relevant campaigns by checking the campaign boxes.

Account-level shared lists are the best approach because they apply across all campaigns automatically. When you add a new campaign, just assign the existing lists. This prevents the common mistake of forgetting negatives on new campaigns.

Campaign-Level Negatives

Use campaign-level negatives for terms specific to one campaign. For example, if you run separate campaigns for “residential plumbing” and “commercial plumbing,” add “commercial” as a negative to the residential campaign and vice versa. This prevents cross-campaign cannibalization.

Check our Google Ads Account Structure Template for more on organizing campaigns with cross-negatives.

Patterns

What patterns should you watch for across industries?

After building negative keyword lists for 200+ accounts, five patterns consistently emerge across every vertical:

  1. Job seekers are universal budget wasters. Every industry has searchers looking for employment, not products. “Salary,” “jobs,” “careers,” and “hiring” appear in search term reports across all verticals. They’re cheap clicks (low CPC) but they never convert.
  2. “How to” and “what is” queries burn money on informational intent. Unless you’re running top-of-funnel awareness campaigns, these searchers aren’t ready to buy. They want answers, not products.
  3. Competitor brand terms waste spend on non-brand campaigns. Someone searching for a specific competitor has already formed a preference. Bidding on their name as a non-brand keyword yields CTRs under 2% and conversion rates under 0.5% in our data.
  4. “Free” in any form signals zero purchase intent. The exception: SaaS freemium models where “free trial” is a valid conversion. For everyone else, “free” is wasted money.
  5. DIY/repair terms indicate the searcher already owns the product. They need help fixing what they have, not buying something new. This pattern is strongest in home services, automotive, and electronics.
Customization

How should you customize these lists for your account?

Don’t blindly copy-paste every negative keyword. Start with the universal list (items 1-53), then add your industry-specific list. After that, review your actual search terms report every two weeks and add account-specific negatives.

Here’s the 3-step process we use at ScaleGrowth.Digital:

  1. Apply universal negatives immediately. Add all 53 universal negatives to an account-level shared list on day one. These are safe across virtually all accounts.
  2. Add industry negatives after review. Read through your industry list above. Remove any that might be valid for your specific business (e.g., a SaaS company selling an open-source product shouldn’t negative-match “open source”).
  3. Mine your search terms report bi-weekly. Export the search terms report for the last 14 days. Sort by spend, descending. Any term with $20+ spend and zero conversions is a candidate for your negative list. We add 5-15 new negatives per account per month using this method.

“Negative keywords are the fastest way to improve ROAS without spending more. When we onboard a new PPC client, the first thing we do is add 50-100 negatives from this list and the search terms report. It’s not unusual to see CPA drop 15-25% within the first two weeks, just from eliminating waste. The money was always there. It was just going to the wrong clicks.”

Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital

Download the Full Negative Keyword List

Get all 200+ negative keywords in a Google Sheets file, organized by category and industry, ready to import into Google Ads.

Download Free List

Related

Related Resources

Google Ads Audit Checklist

38-point audit covering account structure, keywords, ads, bidding, and tracking.

Google Ads Account Structure Template

Campaign and ad group structure template with naming conventions and cross-negatives.

ROAS Calculator

Calculate your return on ad spend and find your breakeven ROAS.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How many negative keywords should a Google Ads account have?

A mature Google Ads account should have 50-200 negative keywords at the account level, plus 10-30 campaign-specific negatives per campaign. Start with 50 universal negatives on day one, then add 5-15 new negatives per month from search terms analysis. Google allows up to 5,000 negative keywords per shared list and 10,000 per campaign.

Should I use broad match or phrase match for negative keywords?

Use phrase match for most negative keywords. Phrase match negatives block your ad when the exact phrase appears in any position within the search query. Broad match negatives only block when ALL words appear in the query (in any order), which can miss variations. Use exact match negatives only when you want to block a very specific query without affecting related terms.

Can negative keywords hurt my Google Ads performance?

Yes, if you add overly broad negatives that block relevant searches. For example, adding “free” as a broad match negative in a SaaS account would block “free trial” searches, which are valid conversions. Always review your negative keywords against your converting search terms before applying them. Start with phrase match to minimize over-blocking.

How often should I update my negative keyword list?

Review your search terms report bi-weekly and add new negatives at least monthly. Set a recurring calendar reminder. Google’s algorithm evolves, user search behavior changes seasonally, and broad match queries shift over time. An account that hasn’t added negatives in 3+ months is almost certainly wasting budget.

Do negative keywords apply to Performance Max campaigns?

As of 2025, Google allows account-level negative keywords to apply to Performance Max campaigns. Previously, you had to request negative keyword additions through Google support. Add your shared negative keyword lists at the account level to ensure PMax campaigns also benefit from them.

Want Us to Clean Up Your Google Ads Waste?

Our PPC team builds custom negative keyword strategies as part of every engagement. We typically cut wasted spend by 15-30% in the first 60 days.

Get PPC Management

Free Growth Audit
Call Now Get Free Audit →