Last week, Google announced it will be rolling out a penalty in mobile search targeting web pages featuring full-page interstitials (intrusive pop-up ads). This penalty will come into effect after January 10, 2017, and there has been some confusion about whether AdSense Page-level ads will be affected.
The question was asked on Twitter, and Google’s John Mueller gave a somewhat vague response:
“What’s important to us is the effect as described in our blog post, no matter where it comes from,” John Mueller tweeted.
The effect described in Google’s blog post does not exactly apply to AdSense Page-level ads. There are two types of Page-level ads: anchor/overlay ads and vignette ads. Google’s official documentation describes anchor/overlay ads as “mobile ads that stick to the edge of the user’s screen and are easily dismissible.”
Since anchor/overlay ads do not cover a user’s entire screen, there’s no discernible reason why pages featuring those ads should fall victim to Google’s upcoming penalty. For that matter, neither should vignette ads, which Google describes as being “displayed when the user leaves a page, rather than when they arrive on one, so the user doesn’t have to wait for them to load.”
With that being said, it should help clear up the confusion people may have about AdSense Page-level ads being affected by the interstitials penalty. While anchor/overlay ads appear immediately upon arrival, they do not cover the entire screen. Vignette ads do cover the entire screen, but only appear upon departure. Pages utilizing either type of ad should, in theory, be in the clear once the new penalty rolls out.