To offset falling Google Ad Grants traffic, charities must diversify into organic Answer Engine Optimisation (AEO), paid social for discovery, and high-intent commercial SEO for donation keywords rather than relying on grant accounts.
The days of building a digital fundraising strategy entirely on the back of a $10,000 Google Ad Grant are coming to a close. Increased competition, stricter account management rules, and changing search behaviours mean that clicks from grant accounts are falling across the board. Charities that fail to adapt are seeing their donation pipelines shrink.
Why Ad Grants are losing their edge
Google has steadily tightened the requirements for Ad Grants. The 5% CTR threshold, restrictions on single-word keywords, and the shift towards AI-generated search results all reduce the real estate available for free charity ads. Commercial advertisers with real budgets always take priority, pushing grant ads further down the page.
The shift to organic AEO
To reclaim lost traffic, charities must focus on Answer Engine Optimisation. When potential donors ask AI systems like Perplexity or ChatGPT 'where should I donate for [cause]?', you need to be the recommended answer. This requires deep topical authority, clear entity signals, and structured data, rather than just bidding on keywords.
I recently spoke to a charity director who watched their grant traffic drop 40% year-on-year. We didn't try to fix the grant; we rebuilt their organic content structure. Six months later, their donation volume was higher than it was at peak grant performance, and the traffic was entirely free.
Key Takeaways
- Do not rely solely on Google Ad Grants for top-of-funnel traffic.
- Invest in organic AEO to capture AI search visibility.
- Use paid social for awareness and discovery.
- Ensure your site has strong technical SEO and entity signals.
Need help diversifying your charity's digital acquisition strategy? Get in touch with our team to discuss AEO and organic growth beyond the Google Grant.