EEA conversion drops post-2025-07-21 rarely have one cause — five suspects compete: tag break, conversion-action edit, DDA swap, Consent Mode v2, seasonality.
What "EEA conversion drop" actually means
"EEA conversion drop" — when an account serving EEA/UK/Switzerland sees reported conversions fall 20-60% with no change in spend, creative, or pages. Inflection point: 2025-07-21, when Google began silently enforcing Consent Mode v2 — accounts without the protocol stopped receiving modeled conversions and remarketing growth (PPC Land, 2026-04-10). Scope: 27 EU states + Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, UK, Switzerland.
The drop is real (modeling stops) and silent (no UI warning) — and overdetermined: the same week often brings a tag rebuild or DDA promotion that independently disturbs the curve.
Top 5 root causes
In order of frequency we observe across audited accounts:
- Tag/tracking break. A GTM publish, GA4 migration, or Cookiebot template update silently disconnects the Google tag. Conversions stop firing entirely on one or more pages. Symptom: 0 conversions for one source, not a percentage drop. See fix-conversion-tracking-missing.
- Conversion-action edit forces re-learning. Editing a conversion action's category, value, or counting rule resets Smart Bidding's model. Google warns: "Editing a conversion action may affect bidding performance for up to two weeks" (Google Ads Help). Drop appears 24-72h post-edit, recovers ~14 days later.
- DDA model swap. Accounts auto-promoted to Data-Driven Attribution from Last Click typically see reported conversions shift -10 to -20% as credit redistributes across the path. Total business value is unchanged; the reporting baseline is.
- Consent Mode v2 misconfig (EEA). The 2025-07-21 enforcement target. Either Consent Mode v2 is absent, or it is present in Basic mode — which loses ~40% of modeling capacity vs Advanced (Simo Ahava, 2024). With 60-70% of EEA visitors declining cookies (CookieYes, 2026), Basic leaves most modeled conversions on the table.
- Seasonality. Q1 post-holiday lull, August EU vacation, Ramadan in mixed-market accounts — match the drop window against last year's same week before escalating.
Diagnostic checklist
Run top to bottom; stop at first match.
| Order | Check | Tool | Signal of root cause |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Did any conversion source go to 0? | Google Ads → Conversions | Tag break (cause 1) |
| 2 | Was a conversion action edited in the last 14 days? | Conversions → Change history | Re-learning (cause 2) |
| 3 | Did attribution model change recently? | Conversions → Attribution model | DDA swap (cause 3) |
| 4 | What is gcs= parameter in GA4 DebugView with cookies declined? |
GA4 DebugView | G100=Basic, G110=Advanced (cause 4) |
| 5 | Compare same-week YoY spend/conversions | Google Ads report | Seasonality (cause 5) |
| 6 | None match | — | Escalate (see below) |
The gcs check is the highest-leverage one for EEA accounts post-enforcement — it takes 90 seconds and isolates Consent Mode v2 misconfig from the four other suspects.
Fix paths
- Cause 1 (tag break): see fix-conversion-tracking-missing for the GTM + tag assistant + page-source verification sequence.
- Cause 2 (re-learning): freeze conversion-action edits, wait 14 days, do not change bid strategy mid-recovery.
- Cause 3 (DDA swap): not a fix — recalibrate baselines. See data-driven-attribution.
- Cause 4 (Consent Mode v2 misconfig): wire the protocol or flip Basic → Advanced via your CMP. See consent-mode-v2. Layer enhanced-conversions on top to recover 5-10% more via first-party hashed identifiers.
- Cause 5 (seasonality): document the YoY pattern and move on.
Methodology note. In EEA audits after the 2025-07-21 enforcement date, "sudden drop" tickets that arrive blaming Consent Mode v2 frequently resolve to cause 1 (tag rebuild the same fortnight) or cause 2 (relabelled conversion action) — the enforcement date became a convenient narrative anchor that masks more mundane operational changes. Whitead's diagnostic discipline is therefore to walk the checklist in strict order — tag → conversion-action edit → attribution model → consent → seasonality — and only attribute the drop to Consent Mode v2 once the first three are ruled out. When consent IS the cause, the typical pattern is Basic-mode misconfiguration (CMP shipped Basic by default and nobody flipped the switch) rather than absent v2. Basic→Advanced recovery typically aligns with Google's stated Smart Bidding re-learning window of up to two weeks (Google Ads Help, 2026-01), so consent and bid-strategy fixes can be sequenced together.
When to escalate
"Drop is >50% across all conversion actions and all sources — what now?"
That is a tag-layer or account-suspension event, not Consent Mode v2. Check Google Ads policy notifications, GTM container publish history, and whether the conversion linker is still firing. A misconfigured Consent Mode v2 degrades gradually in EEA only — it does not zero out a global account.
"My GA4 shows conversions but Google Ads does not — same Consent Mode wiring?"
Different gates. GA4 uses analytics_storage and models conversions independently of Ads. If GA4 sees them and Ads does not, check the GA4→Ads link, primary-conversion flag, and attribution window before blaming consent.
"We are Basic by legal mandate — can we recover anything without flipping to Advanced?"
Partially. Layer enhanced-conversions on top of Basic — hashed email/phone fires only after consent, respecting the same legal posture while recovering an incremental share of the delta (Google reports a +5% Search baseline for EC; mature deployments see more, see enhanced-conversions for sourcing). Combined with offline conversion imports, Basic accounts close a meaningful portion of the gap to Advanced — though never fully, since modeling capacity is the structural difference between the two modes.
Sources
- PPC Land: Consent Mode V2 enforcement is silently breaking Google Ads conversions — enforcement date confirmation, retrieved 2026-05-20
- Google Ads Help: About consent mode — Basic vs Advanced behaviour, retrieved 2026-04-29
- Google Ads Help: Edit conversion actions — re-learning warning text
- Simo Ahava: Consent Mode V2 For Google Tags — Basic vs Advanced modeling delta
- CookieYes: Cookie Consent Trends by Country 2026 — EEA cookie decline rate