The Role of GTINs in Product Advertising
GTINs (Global Trade Item Numbers) are the backbone of product identification in digital advertising. Understanding their importance can mean the difference between approved and rejected products.
What Are GTINs?
GTIN is an umbrella term for various product identification numbers used globally. These standardized codes help platforms identify, categorize, and match products accurately.
📊 GTIN Types
- UPC-A (12 digits) - United States, Canada
- EAN-13 (13 digits) - Europe, worldwide
- EAN-8 (8 digits) - Small products
- ISBN (13 digits) - Books
- ITF-14 (14 digits) - Cartons, cases
Why GTINs Matter for Advertising
Google Shopping
Google uses GTINs to:
- Match your products to the Google product catalog
- Provide rich product information to shoppers
- Enable product reviews and ratings
- Improve ad quality and relevance
- Support price comparison features
Facebook/Meta Commerce
GTINs help Meta:
- Verify product authenticity
- Enable brand catalog matching
- Support collaborative ads with retailers
- Improve ad delivery optimization
GTIN Requirements by Platform
| Platform | GTIN Required? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Google Shopping | Strongly recommended | Required for products with known GTINs |
| Facebook Catalog | Recommended | Improves matching and delivery |
| Amazon | Required | Brand Registry may provide exemptions |
| eBay | Required (most categories) | Helps with search visibility |
| Walmart | Required | No exemptions for most products |
Common GTIN Issues
Invalid GTIN Format
GTINs must pass check digit validation. An incorrect digit anywhere in the code will cause rejection.
Valid: 012345678905 (check digit 5 is correct)
Invalid: 012345678901 (check digit should be 5, not 1)
GTIN Mismatch
Using a GTIN that belongs to a different product causes:
- Product information conflicts
- Potential policy violations
- Poor user experience
- Account warnings or suspensions
Missing GTINs
Not all products have GTINs. In these cases:
Products Without GTINs
- Custom or handmade products
- Vintage or antique items
- Some regional products
- Store brands without registered GTINs
- Parts and components
Handling Missing GTINs
For Google Shopping
Use the identifier_exists attribute:
<g:identifier_exists>false</g:identifier_exists>
For Other Platforms
- Amazon - Apply for GTIN exemption through Brand Registry
- eBay - Use \"Does not apply\" option
- Facebook - Leave blank if not available
\"Proper GTIN implementation improved our product approval rate by 40% and increased impression share by 25%.\"
— E-Commerce Operations Lead
Getting GTINs for Your Products
If You're the Brand Owner
- Register with GS1 (the global GTIN authority)
- Obtain a company prefix
- Assign unique GTINs to each product variant
- Maintain a GTIN registry
If You're a Reseller
- Request GTINs from your supplier/manufacturer
- Use the manufacturer's barcode (already on packaging)
- Never create fake or fabricated GTINs
GTIN Best Practices
- Validate before submission - Check digit validation catches typos
- One GTIN per variant - Different sizes/colors need different GTINs
- Keep a master database - Track all GTINs centrally
- Audit regularly - Ensure GTINs match physical products
- Don't reuse GTINs - Retired products should not have GTINs reassigned
GTINs might seem like just another data point, but they're fundamental to product advertising success. Take the time to get them right, and you'll see improved approval rates and ad performance.