Location targeting in PPC lets you choose where your ads can appear, so Google Ads tries to show them to people in the cities, ZIP codes, states, or radius you select, and it uses signals like device location, search behavior, and account data to decide who fits that area.
In practice, you can target broad areas like the entire United States, tighter areas like Orlando or Orange County, or a radius around your office, such as 10 miles from downtown Orlando. You can also exclude places you do not want, which is useful if you serve Winter Park and Lake Nona but not Kissimmee or Sanford. That keeps more of your budget focused on places where you can actually sell, book, or deliver.
| Location setting | How it works | Best fit |
|---|---|---|
| Country or state | Shows ads in a large geographic area | Businesses with wide service coverage |
| City or ZIP code | Shows ads in selected local markets | Local brands with defined service areas |
| Radius targeting | Shows ads within a set distance from an address | Dentists, law firms, med spas, home services |
| Location exclusions | Blocks areas where you do not want spend | Businesses that need tighter budget control |
| Presence setting | Focuses on people physically in or regularly in the target area | Most local lead generation campaigns |
| Presence or interest | Can also reach people outside the area who show interest in it | Tourism, destination, relocation, hospitality |
The setting that trips up many advertisers is the advanced location option. If you run a local service business, we usually prefer the setting focused on people who are actually in, or regularly in, your target area. If you leave campaigns too broad, you can pay for clicks from people outside your service area who were only reading about Orlando or searching for it while sitting somewhere else.
That matters a lot for small and mid-size businesses. A dental office, family law firm, or pest control company usually wants nearby leads, not statewide curiosity clicks. A relocation realtor, vacation rental brand, or tourism business may want a wider net because the buyer can be outside Florida while planning a move or trip.
Location targeting also works best when it matches your keywords, ads, and landing pages. If your ad says “Orlando emergency dentist” but sends people to a generic page with no local proof, conversion rates usually drop. That is why our PPC management service treats geography, keyword intent, and landing page fit as one system, not separate tasks.
One more point: location targeting is helpful, but it is not perfect. Google treats it as a best-effort system, so you still need to watch your search terms, user locations, call quality, and conversion data. If your campaigns bring traffic from the wrong places, tighten the target area, add exclusions, and review whether your landing page matches local intent. Our FAQ on search intent helps explain why that match affects lead quality so much.
If you want better control over ad spend in Central Florida, start by targeting only the places you can serve profitably, then build out from there instead of going broad on day one.
