Fewer larger jobs is preferred over many smaller jobs.
Order uploaded operations by operation type. For example, if your job
contains operations to add campaigns, ad groups, and ad group criteria,
order the operations in your upload so that all of the campaign
operations are first, followed by all of
the ad group operations, and finally all
ad group criterion operations.
Within operations of the same type, it can improve performance to group them
by parent resource. For example, if you have a series of
AdGroupCriterionOperation objects, it can be more efficient to group
operations by ad group, rather than intermixing operations that affect ad
group criteria in different ad groups.
Avoid concurrency issues
When submitting multiple concurrent jobs for the same account, try to reduce
the likelihood of jobs operating on the same objects at the same time, while
maintaining large job sizes. Many unfinished jobs, which have the status of
RUNNING,
try to mutate the same set of objects, which can lead to deadlock-like
conditions resulting in severe slow-down and even job failures.
Don't submit multiple operations that mutate the same object in the same
job, as the result can be unpredictable.
Retrieve results optimally
Don't poll the job status too frequently or you risk hitting rate limit
errors.
Don't retrieve more than 1,000 results per page. The server could return
fewer than that due to load or other factors.
The results order will be the same as the upload order.
Additional usage guidance
You can set an upper bound for how long a batch job is allowed to run before
being cancelled. When creating a new batch job, set the
metadata.execution_limit_seconds
field to your preferred time limit, in seconds. There is no default time
limit if metadata.execution_limit_seconds is not set.
It is recommended to add no more than 1,000 operations per
AddBatchJobOperationsRequest
and use the
sequence_token
to upload the rest of the operations to the same job. Depending on the
content of the operations, too many operations in a single
AddBatchJobOperationsRequest could cause a REQUEST_TOO_LARGE error. You
can handle this error by reducing the number of operations and retrying the
AddBatchJobOperationsRequest.
Limitations
Each BatchJob supports up to one million
operations.
Each account can have up to 100 active or pending jobs at the same time.
Pending jobs older than 7 days are automatically removed.
Each AddBatchJobOperationsRequest
has a maximum size of 10,484,504 bytes. If you exceed this, you will receive
an INTERNAL_ERROR. You can determine the size of the request before
submitting and take appropriate action if it is too large.
[[["Easy to understand","easyToUnderstand","thumb-up"],["Solved my problem","solvedMyProblem","thumb-up"],["Other","otherUp","thumb-up"]],[["Missing the information I need","missingTheInformationINeed","thumb-down"],["Too complicated / too many steps","tooComplicatedTooManySteps","thumb-down"],["Out of date","outOfDate","thumb-down"],["Samples / code issue","samplesCodeIssue","thumb-down"],["Other","otherDown","thumb-down"]],["Last updated 2025-08-25 UTC."],[[["\u003cp\u003eTo improve throughput when using BatchJobService, submit fewer, larger jobs and order operations by type and parent resource to enhance efficiency.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eWhen running concurrent jobs, minimize the likelihood of them operating on the same objects simultaneously to avoid potential deadlock-like conditions and job failures.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eFor optimal results retrieval, avoid excessive job status polling and retrieve results in batches of 1,000 or less to prevent rate limit errors and ensure efficient data handling.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eBatchJobService allows setting an execution time limit and recommends a maximum of 1,000 operations per request to avoid exceeding size limitations and potential errors.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eEach BatchJob is subject to limitations, including a maximum of one million operations, 100 active or pending jobs per account, a 7-day lifespan for pending jobs, and a request size limit of 10,484,504 bytes.\u003c/p\u003e\n"]]],[],null,["# Best Practices and Limitations\n\nConsider these guidelines when using [`BatchJobService`](/google-ads/api/reference/rpc/v21/BatchJobService).\n\nImprove throughput\n------------------\n\n- Fewer larger jobs is preferred over many smaller jobs.\n\n- Order uploaded operations by operation type. For example, if your job\n contains operations to add campaigns, ad groups, and ad group criteria,\n order the operations in your upload so that all of the [campaign\n operations](/google-ads/api/reference/rpc/v21/CampaignOperation) are first, followed by all of\n the [ad group operations](/google-ads/api/reference/rpc/v21/AdGroupOperation), and finally all\n [ad group criterion operations](/google-ads/api/reference/rpc/v21/AdGroupCriterionOperation).\n\n- Within operations of the same type, it can improve performance to group them\n by parent resource. For example, if you have a series of\n `AdGroupCriterionOperation` objects, it can be more efficient to group\n operations by ad group, rather than intermixing operations that affect ad\n group criteria in different ad groups.\n\nAvoid concurrency issues\n------------------------\n\n- When submitting multiple concurrent jobs for the same account, try to reduce\n the likelihood of jobs operating on the same objects at the same time, while\n maintaining large job sizes. Many unfinished jobs, which have the status of\n [`RUNNING`](/google-ads/api/reference/rpc/v21/BatchJobStatusEnum.BatchJobStatus#running),\n try to mutate the same set of objects, which can lead to deadlock-like\n conditions resulting in severe slow-down and even job failures.\n\n- Don't submit multiple operations that mutate the same object in the same\n job, as the result can be unpredictable.\n\nRetrieve results optimally\n--------------------------\n\n- Don't poll the job status too frequently or you risk hitting rate limit\n errors.\n\n- Don't retrieve more than 1,000 results per page. The server could return\n fewer than that due to load or other factors.\n\n- The results order will be the same as the upload order.\n\nAdditional usage guidance\n-------------------------\n\n- You can set an upper bound for how long a batch job is allowed to run before\n being cancelled. When creating a new batch job, set the\n [`metadata.execution_limit_seconds`](/google-ads/api/reference/rpc/v21/BatchJob.BatchJobMetadata#execution_limit_seconds)\n field to your preferred time limit, in seconds. There is no default time\n limit if `metadata.execution_limit_seconds` is not set.\n\n- It is recommended to add no more than 1,000 operations per\n [`AddBatchJobOperationsRequest`](/google-ads/api/reference/rpc/v21/BatchJobService/AddBatchJobOperations)\n and use the\n [`sequence_token`](/google-ads/api/reference/rpc/v21/AddBatchJobOperationsRequest#sequence_token)\n to upload the rest of the operations to the same job. Depending on the\n content of the operations, too many operations in a single\n `AddBatchJobOperationsRequest` could cause a [`REQUEST_TOO_LARGE`](/google-ads/api/reference/rpc/v21/DatabaseErrorEnum.DatabaseError#request_too_large) error. You\n can handle this error by reducing the number of operations and retrying the\n `AddBatchJobOperationsRequest`.\n\nLimitations\n-----------\n\n- Each [`BatchJob`](/google-ads/api/reference/rpc/v21/BatchJob) supports up to one million\n operations.\n\n- Each account can have up to 100 active or pending jobs at the same time.\n\n- Pending jobs older than 7 days are automatically removed.\n\n- Each [`AddBatchJobOperationsRequest`](/google-ads/api/reference/rpc/v21/BatchJobService/AddBatchJobOperations)\n has a maximum size of 10,484,504 bytes. If you exceed this, you will receive\n an `INTERNAL_ERROR`. You can determine the size of the request before\n submitting and take appropriate action if it is too large.\n\n ### Java\n\n\n static final int MAX_REQUEST_BYTES = 10_484_504;\n\n ... (code to get the request object)\n\n int sizeInBytes = request.getSerializedSize();\n\n ### Python\n\n\n from google.ads.googleads.client import GoogleAdsClient\n\n MAX_REQUEST_BYTES = 10484504\n\n ... (code to get the request object)\n\n size_in_bytes = request._pb.ByteSize()\n\n ### Ruby\n\n\n require 'google/ads/google_ads'\n\n MAX_REQUEST_BYTES = 10484504\n\n ... (code to get the request object)\n\n size_in_bytes = request.to_proto.bytesize\n\n ### PHP\n\n\n use Google\\Ads\\GoogleAds\\V16\\Resources\\Campaign;\n\n const MAX_REQUEST_BYTES = 10484504;\n\n ... (code to get the request object)\n\n $size_in_bytes = $campaign-\u003ebyteSize() . PHP_EOL;\n\n ### .NET\n\n\n using Google.Protobuf;\n const int MAX_REQUEST_BYTES = 10484504;\n\n ... (code to get the request object)\n\n int sizeInBytes = request.ToByteArray().Length;\n\n ### Perl\n\n\n use Devel::Size qw(total_size);\n use constant MAX_REQUEST_BYTES =\u003e 10484504;\n\n ... (code to get the request object)\n\n my $size_in_bytes = total_size($request);"]]