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How to Set Up Retargeting: A Step-by-Step Guide for 2026

Retargeted visitors convert at 3.8% vs 1.5% for cold traffic. This guide covers Google Ads remarketing, Meta retargeting, audience segmentation, and frequency management across both platforms.

Last updated: March 2026 · 11 min read

The Short Answer

What is retargeting and why should you use it?

Retargeting is a paid advertising strategy that shows ads to people who have already visited your website, used your app, or interacted with your brand online. It works because you’re reaching people who already know you. Retargeted users are 43% more likely to convert than first-time visitors (AdRoll, 2025), and retargeting campaigns deliver a median conversion rate of 3.8%, compared to 1.5% for prospecting campaigns (DemandSage, 2026).

“Most brands waste 60-70% of their ad budget on cold traffic that will never convert in one visit. Retargeting flips that equation. You spend less, reach warmer audiences, and your ROAS goes from 2x to 6-15x. The math is hard to argue with.”

Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital

This guide walks you through setting up retargeting on both Google Ads and Meta (Facebook/Instagram), from installing tracking pixels to building audience segments, creating ad creative, and managing frequency. Each section is platform-specific so you can implement on one or both.
Contents

What’s covered in this guide?

  1. What types of retargeting are available?
  2. How do you set up retargeting in Google Ads?
  3. How do you set up retargeting on Meta (Facebook/Instagram)?
  4. How do you segment your retargeting audiences?
  5. How do you create retargeting ad creative?
  6. How do you manage frequency and timing?
  7. Pro tips from managing $2M+ in retargeting spend
  8. Common retargeting mistakes to avoid
  9. FAQ
Step 1

What types of retargeting are available?

Retargeting comes in several forms, each suited to different business models and customer journeys. The right approach depends on your traffic volume, sales cycle length, and the data you’ve collected.

Retargeting is a paid advertising strategy that serves ads to users who have previously interacted with your website, app, or content, using tracking pixels and audience data to re-engage them toward conversion.

Retargeting Type How It Works Best For Min. Audience Size
Site visitor retargeting Pixel tracks all website visitors Any business with web traffic 1,000 users (Google), 100 (Meta)
Dynamic product retargeting Shows specific products users viewed E-commerce with product feeds 1,000+ product page views
Customer Match / CRM retargeting Uploads email lists to ad platforms Businesses with email lists 1,000 matched emails
Engagement retargeting Targets users who engaged with social content Brands active on social media Varies by platform
Video retargeting Targets users who watched your videos Brands using video content No minimum on YouTube
App retargeting Re-engages users who installed your app Mobile app businesses Varies by platform
For most businesses starting with retargeting, site visitor retargeting on both Google and Meta gives you the broadest reach. E-commerce brands should add dynamic product retargeting within the first month. B2B companies get the best results from Customer Match combined with site visitor retargeting.
Step 2

How do you set up retargeting in Google Ads?

Google Ads retargeting (Google calls it “remarketing”) requires installing a tracking tag and building audience segments. In 2026, Google has rebranded remarketing lists to “Your data segments,” reflecting how their AI systems use first-party audience data for bidding optimization (Search Engine Land, 2026). Step 1: Install the Google Ads tag. Go to Google Ads > Tools > Audience Manager > Your Data Sources. Set up the Google Ads tag. Choose between installing it directly on your site or through Google Tag Manager (recommended). GTM gives you more control and doesn’t require developer help for changes. Step 2: Enable Google Analytics 4 linking. Connect your GA4 property to Google Ads. This lets you create audiences based on GA4 events (scroll depth, time on page, specific page views) rather than just “visited the site.” GA4 audiences are more granular and convert better. Step 3: Create audience segments. Go to Audience Manager > Segments > New Segment. Start with these four segments:
  • All website visitors (last 30 days)
  • Product/service page viewers (last 14 days)
  • Cart abandoners / form starters (last 7 days)
  • Converters to exclude (last 90 days)
Step 4: Build your campaign. Create a new Display campaign (or Performance Max if you want cross-channel). Select your audience segments. Set a daily budget. For retargeting, start with $20-50/day and scale based on ROAS. Upload your creative (responsive display ads need headlines, descriptions, images, and your logo). Step 5: Set up dynamic remarketing (e-commerce). Connect your Google Merchant Center feed to Google Ads. Enable dynamic remarketing in your campaign settings. Google will automatically generate ads featuring the exact products each user viewed on your site. Dynamic remarketing can increase conversion rates by 50-200% compared to standard display retargeting (DemandSage, 2026). A critical detail: always exclude converters from your retargeting audiences. Without an exclusion list, you’ll waste budget showing ads to people who already bought. Review your Google Ads audit checklist to make sure your exclusions are configured correctly.
Step 3

How do you set up retargeting on Meta (Facebook/Instagram)?

Meta retargeting reaches users across Facebook, Instagram, Messenger, and the Audience Network. It starts with the Meta Pixel and the Conversions API, then builds Custom Audiences from website visitors, engagement data, and customer lists. Step 1: Install the Meta Pixel + Conversions API. Go to Meta Events Manager > Data Sources > Add Pixel. Install via partner integration (Shopify, WordPress) or manually through your site’s header code. In 2026, the Conversions API (CAPI) is required alongside the pixel for accurate tracking. CAPI sends events server-side, bypassing browser-level tracking restrictions. Without CAPI, you’ll lose 20-40% of your conversion data. Step 2: Verify your events. Use the Meta Pixel Helper Chrome extension and the Events Manager test tool to confirm events are firing correctly. Check for: PageView, ViewContent, AddToCart, InitiateCheckout, Purchase, and Lead events. Each event becomes the basis for an audience segment. Step 3: Create Custom Audiences. Go to Meta Ads Manager > Audiences > Create Audience > Custom Audience. Build these starter audiences:
  • Website visitors (last 30 days, from pixel)
  • Engaged visitors (top 25% time on site, last 14 days)
  • Product viewers who didn’t purchase (last 7 days)
  • Instagram/Facebook engagers (liked, commented, shared, last 90 days)
  • Video viewers (watched 75%+, last 30 days)
Step 4: Build your campaigns. Create a campaign with the Sales or Leads objective. At the ad set level, select your Custom Audiences. For budget, Meta’s retargeting sweet spot in 2026 is between 1 and 3 million users per ad set (Benly.ai, 2026). If your audiences are smaller, combine segments to give Meta’s algorithm enough data to optimize. Step 5: Set up Advantage+ Catalog Ads (e-commerce). Connect your product catalog to Meta. Advantage+ Catalog Ads (formerly Dynamic Product Ads) automatically show users the products they viewed on your site. Facebook retargeting ads with dynamic products improve conversion rates by 30-80% (Cropink, 2025). Treat Meta retargeting as a funnel, not a single campaign. Top-of-funnel retargeting (all visitors) gets awareness messaging. Mid-funnel (product viewers) gets product-specific content. Bottom-of-funnel (cart abandoners) gets urgency and social proof. Each stage needs different creative and different offers.
Step 4

How do you segment your retargeting audiences?

Audience segmentation is what separates a 2x ROAS retargeting campaign from a 10x ROAS campaign. Showing the same ad to every website visitor is barely better than no retargeting at all. Segments let you match the message to the intent level. Segment by behavior, not demographics. What someone did on your site tells you more about their purchase intent than their age or gender. A user who viewed 3 product pages and added to cart is 10x more valuable than a user who bounced after 5 seconds. Treat them differently. Here’s the segmentation framework we use at ScaleGrowth.Digital:
Segment Definition Window Message Budget Share
Bouncers Visited 1 page, left in <10 sec 7 days Brand awareness 10%
Browsers Viewed 2+ pages, no action 14 days Value proposition 20%
Engagers Viewed service/product pages 14 days Benefits + social proof 25%
Intent signals Added to cart, started form 7 days Offer + urgency 35%
Past customers Purchased previously 90-180 days Upsell, cross-sell 10%
Avoid over-segmentation. A common mistake is creating 50 hyper-granular audience segments. Google’s and Meta’s AI systems need data density to optimize (Search Engine Land, 2026). When you slice audiences too thin, the algorithms don’t have enough matched records to learn. The sweet spot for most businesses is 4-6 segments. Always exclude converters. Create an exclusion audience of people who’ve completed your primary conversion action (purchase, form submission, booking) in the last 30-90 days. Without this, you’ll spend money retargeting people who already converted.
Step 5

How do you create retargeting ad creative?

Retargeting creative should acknowledge that the viewer already knows you. Generic brand awareness ads don’t work in retargeting because the person has already visited your site. Your ad needs to address why they left without converting and give them a reason to come back. For browsers (visited but didn’t engage deeply): Focus on your value proposition and differentiation. What makes you different from the 4 other companies they’re also considering? Customer testimonials, review scores, and trust badges perform well at this stage. For product/service viewers: Show the specific products or services they looked at. Dynamic creative does this automatically. For service businesses, reference the category they explored: “Still looking for a [service]? Here’s what our clients say.” For cart abandoners / form starters: This audience was inches from converting. Address the likely objection: free shipping thresholds, money-back guarantees, limited-time discounts, or social proof (“2,400 customers this month”). These ads drive the highest ROAS of any retargeting segment. Creative refresh cadence. Swap your retargeting creative every 2-3 weeks. Ad fatigue hits retargeting campaigns faster than prospecting campaigns because the audience is smaller and sees the same ads repeatedly. Track frequency metrics. When cost per conversion starts climbing, it’s time for new creative. Video ads outperform static images in retargeting by 20-30% on Meta (internal ScaleGrowth.Digital testing, 2025). A 15-second video showing your product in action or a customer testimonial converts better than a carousel for most brands.
Step 6

How do you manage frequency and timing?

Retargeting frequency is the balance between staying top-of-mind and becoming annoying. Too few impressions and users forget you. Too many and they develop negative brand associations. The data points to a specific range. Optimal frequency: 5-7 impressions per person over 7 days (Benly.ai, 2026). Beyond this, you risk ad fatigue and negative brand perception. In Google Ads, set frequency caps at the campaign level. In Meta, monitor the Frequency metric in your reporting columns and pause ad sets when frequency exceeds 7 within a 7-day window. Retargeting window by sales cycle:
  • Impulse purchases (under $50): 7-14 day window
  • Considered purchases ($50-500): 14-30 day window
  • High-ticket items ($500+): 30-60 day window
  • B2B / enterprise: 60-180 day window
Start with a 30-day window as your baseline and test shorter and longer windows against each other. The conversion data will tell you where your sweet spot is. Sequential messaging. Instead of showing the same ad for 30 days, build a sequence. Days 1-7: value proposition ad. Days 8-14: social proof ad with testimonials. Days 15-30: offer ad with a specific incentive. This approach combats ad fatigue and moves the user through a mini-funnel within the retargeting experience. Retargeting campaigns typically cost 30-60% less per click than cold campaigns (DemandSage, 2026), so you get more impressions per dollar. Use that efficiency advantage wisely by controlling frequency rather than blasting the same ad indefinitely.
From the Field

Pro tips from managing $2M+ in retargeting spend

1. Run Google and Meta retargeting simultaneously. Google Display reaches users across 3 million websites and apps. Meta reaches users on Facebook, Instagram, and Messenger. The overlap is smaller than you’d think. Running both platforms covers different moments in the user’s day and increases overall conversion lift without doubling your frequency on either platform. 2. Your retargeting pixel should be on every page, day one. Don’t wait until you’re “ready to run retargeting.” Install the Google tag and Meta pixel on day one of your website. They collect data passively. When you’re ready to launch campaigns, you’ll have audience pools already built. Starting with zero data means waiting weeks to build minimum audience sizes. 3. Exclude your employees and existing customers. Add your office IP addresses and internal team email lists to exclusion audiences. Without this, you’ll see inflated impression numbers and waste budget showing ads to people who already work for you or already bought from you. 4. Test burn pixels for measuring incremental lift. A burn pixel stops showing retargeting ads to a user after they convert. Without one, you might attribute conversions to retargeting that would have happened anyway. Run lift tests by holding back 10% of your retargeting audience as a control group. The difference in conversion rate tells you your true retargeting lift. 5. Retargeting ROAS should be 6x minimum. Retargeting campaigns that deliver less than 6x ROAS have a structural problem: wrong audience, wrong creative, or wrong frequency. We typically see 6-15x ROAS on well-structured retargeting campaigns (DemandSage, 2026). If you’re below 6x, audit your segments and exclusions before increasing budget. Our PPC team benchmarks every retargeting campaign against these thresholds.
Watch Out

What are the most common retargeting mistakes?

1. Not excluding converters. This is the single biggest source of wasted retargeting spend. Every dollar spent showing ads to someone who already bought is a dollar wasted. Set up exclusion audiences immediately and verify they’re working monthly. 2. One ad for all audiences. Showing the same generic ad to bounced visitors, product viewers, and cart abandoners ignores the entire point of retargeting. Each segment has different objections and different levels of intent. Your creative needs to match. 3. Running retargeting without the Conversions API. In 2026, browser-level tracking (cookies and pixels) misses 20-40% of conversions due to iOS privacy changes, ad blockers, and cookie restrictions. If you’re running Meta retargeting without CAPI, your audience pools are incomplete and your conversion data is inaccurate. 4. Setting it and forgetting it. Retargeting campaigns need weekly attention. Creative gets stale. Audience pools shift. Frequency creeps up. Check your frequency metrics, creative performance, and conversion rates every week. Refresh creative every 2-3 weeks. 5. Retargeting with too little traffic. If your site gets fewer than 500 visitors per month, retargeting won’t generate enough audience volume to be effective. Google requires a minimum of 1,000 users in a segment for Display campaigns. Meta needs at least 100, but performance degrades sharply below 1,000. Focus on traffic acquisition first, then layer retargeting on top.
Related Resources

What else supports your retargeting strategy?

Google Ads Audit Checklist

38-point audit including conversion tracking, audience exclusions, and bid strategy checks that directly affect retargeting performance. Get Checklist →

ROAS Calculator

Calculate your return on ad spend for retargeting campaigns. Input your spend, revenue, and conversions to benchmark against industry standards. Use Calculator →

Google Ads Report Template

Report on retargeting performance alongside your prospecting campaigns with a structured monthly reporting template. Get Template →

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does retargeting cost?

Retargeting CPCs are typically 30-60% lower than cold traffic CPCs. On Google Display, expect $0.50-2.00 per click for retargeting. On Meta, retargeting CPMs range from $5-15 depending on audience size and industry. Start with $20-50/day per platform and scale based on ROAS.

What’s the minimum website traffic needed for retargeting?

Google Ads requires a minimum of 1,000 users in an audience segment for Display campaigns and 100 for Search. Meta requires 100 but performs poorly below 1,000. If your site gets fewer than 500 monthly visitors, focus on traffic acquisition before launching retargeting.

Is retargeting creepy or intrusive?

Retargeting feels intrusive when it’s done badly: wrong frequency, stale creative, or showing ads for products someone already bought. When done well (frequency-capped, relevant creative, converters excluded), most users appreciate being reminded of products or services they were genuinely considering. The conversion rates prove this: users who see retargeting ads are 43% more likely to convert.

How does retargeting work with privacy changes and cookie deprecation?

Third-party cookies are declining, but retargeting adapts. Google’s Privacy Sandbox and Meta’s Conversions API are the replacements. First-party data (your own website pixel data, email lists, CRM data) is now the foundation of retargeting. Server-side tracking via CAPI recovers the data that browser-level cookies miss. Retargeting isn’t disappearing. The tracking methods are changing.

Should I use Google Ads or Meta for retargeting?

Both. Google Display retargeting reaches users across 3 million websites and apps. Meta retargeting reaches users on Facebook and Instagram. They cover different moments in a user’s day with minimal overlap. If you must pick one, choose the platform where your audience spends more time. For B2B, Google typically performs better. For B2C and e-commerce, Meta often edges ahead.

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