Google Consent Mode v2 UK: Website Owner Guide

Google Consent Mode v2 for UK Websites

Google Consent Mode v2 helps websites communicate consent choices to Google tags, including Google Analytics, Google Ads and Google Tag Manager. It can support more privacy-aware measurement, but it does not replace a cookie banner, consent management platform or proper consent setup.

This guide explains what Google Consent Mode v2 does, what the main consent signals mean, how it connects with cookie banners, and what UK website owners should check before relying on it.

This is practical website guidance only. It is not legal advice or formal compliance certification.

What Is Google Consent Mode v2?

Google Consent Mode v2 is a way for a website to send consent signals to Google. Those signals tell Google tags whether storage, analytics, advertising data use and personalisation are granted or denied based on the visitor’s consent choice.

It should work alongside a cookie banner or consent management platform. It is not a banner by itself, and it does not automatically make a website compliant.

It Sends Consent Signals

Consent Mode communicates whether certain Google tag functions are granted or denied based on user choice.

It Works With Your Banner

Consent Mode needs a cookie banner or consent management platform to collect and pass user choices.

It Still Needs Testing

The setup should be checked before consent, after rejection and after acceptance to confirm tags behave correctly.

The Four Main Consent Mode v2 Signals

Consent Mode v2 is often discussed in relation to four important consent types. These help Google tags adjust behaviour for analytics, advertising storage, advertising data use and personalisation.

analytics_storage

Controls storage related to analytics, such as analytics cookies or identifiers used to understand website activity.

ad_storage

Controls storage related to advertising, such as cookies or identifiers used for advertising measurement or ad-related features.

ad_user_data

Sets consent for sending user data related to advertising to Google. This is relevant for advertising measurement use cases.

ad_personalization

Sets consent for personalised advertising. This is relevant where personalised ads, remarketing or advertising personalisation features are used.

Why Google Consent Mode v2 Matters

Many UK websites use Google Analytics, Google Ads and Google Tag Manager to measure traffic, conversions and marketing performance. Consent Mode v2 helps those tools receive consent information so they can adjust behaviour according to the user’s choices.

This matters because a cookie banner should not simply display wording. It should connect with the website’s actual tag behaviour so analytics and advertising tools respond correctly to consent choices.

Consent Mode can support better measurement, but it should not be treated as a shortcut around cookie consent, PECR or UK GDPR considerations.

Google Consent Mode v2 and cookie banner consent review

How to Set Up Consent Mode v2 Properly

The exact setup depends on your cookie banner, consent management platform, Google Tag Manager setup and website platform. The aim is to make sure Google tags receive the correct consent state before they process analytics or advertising activity.

Step One: Start With Default Consent

Before consent is given, set the relevant consent states to denied where required. This helps prevent tags from assuming consent before the visitor has made a choice.

Step Two: Update Consent After Choice

When a visitor accepts or rejects cookie categories, update the relevant Consent Mode signals so Google tags receive the correct granted or denied status.

Step Three: Test Tag Behaviour

Test before consent, after rejection and after acceptance using browser tools, Google Tag Assistant and your consent platform’s debug features.

Google Consent Mode v2 Checklist

Use this checklist to review whether your Consent Mode setup is connected properly to your cookie banner and Google tags.

  • Does the website use Google Analytics, Google Ads or Google Tag Manager?
  • Is a cookie banner or consent platform collecting visitor choices?
  • Are default consent states set before Google tags fire?
  • Are consent states updated after the visitor makes a choice?
  • Are analytics and advertising consent categories separated clearly?
  • Are `analytics_storage` and `ad_storage` configured correctly?
  • Are `ad_user_data` and `ad_personalization` configured where Google Ads features are used?
  • Does rejecting cookies keep analytics and advertising storage denied?
  • Does accepting cookies update only the correct categories?
  • Has the setup been tested on desktop and mobile?

Common Consent Mode v2 Mistakes

Most issues come from assuming Consent Mode is active simply because Google tags are installed. The setup needs to be connected to real consent choices.

No Default Consent State

Tags may load before the visitor has made a choice if default consent states are not set early enough.

Consent Banner Not Connected

The website shows a banner, but the visitor’s choice is not properly passed to Google tags.

Advertising Signals Missed

Websites using Google Ads may forget to configure `ad_user_data` and `ad_personalization`, which can affect advertising measurement and personalisation signals.

How to Test Consent Mode v2

Testing matters because a site can appear to have Consent Mode installed but still send the wrong signal or allow tags to behave incorrectly.

Before Consent

Open the site in a private browser session and check whether consent states are denied before the visitor makes a choice.

After Rejection

Reject non-essential cookies and check whether analytics and advertising consent states remain denied.

After Acceptance

Accept analytics or marketing cookies and confirm that only the relevant consent signals change to granted.

Official Guidance and Platform Sources

Google explains that Consent Mode lets websites communicate cookie or app identifier consent status to Google. Google tags then adjust their behaviour based on user choices.

Google also explains that Consent Mode does not provide a consent banner or widget. It should interact with a website’s consent banner or consent management platform.

The ICO explains that websites should tell people if cookies are set, clearly explain what those cookies do and why, and obtain consent unless a limited exception applies for cookies that are essential to provide a service requested by the user.

Google Consent Mode v2 FAQs

Does Google Consent Mode v2 replace a cookie banner?

No. Consent Mode does not provide a cookie banner or consent widget. It works with a cookie banner or consent management platform so Google tags can respond to visitor choices.

Does Consent Mode v2 make a website GDPR compliant?

No tool automatically makes a website compliant. Consent Mode v2 can help communicate consent status to Google, but the website still needs clear wording, valid consent controls, accurate policies and proper technical implementation.

What changed with Consent Mode v2?

Consent Mode v2 places more emphasis on additional advertising consent signals, including `ad_user_data` and `ad_personalization`, alongside existing storage signals such as `ad_storage` and `analytics_storage`.

Do I need Consent Mode v2 for Google Ads?

If your website uses Google Ads, conversion tracking, remarketing or enhanced measurement features, Consent Mode v2 is likely to be relevant and should be reviewed carefully with your Google tag setup.

How do I know if Consent Mode is working?

Test the website before consent, after rejecting cookies and after accepting cookies. Check whether the correct consent states are sent and whether Google tags respond as expected.

Related Cookie Banner Guides

Continue reading practical guidance on Google Analytics consent, advertising pixels, cookie banner examples and platform-specific tracking checks.

Check Your Consent Mode v2 Setup

Download the free checklist or request a practical review of your cookie banner, Google Consent Mode signals, Google Analytics setup, Google Ads tags and tracking behaviour.

This is practical website guidance only and is not legal advice or formal compliance certification.