For 14 years, Google has been the king of online ads. That reign is about to end. New data from eMarketer shows Meta will pull in $243.5 billion in ad sales this year. Google is on pace for $239.5 billion. If those numbers hold, it would be the first time Google has lost the top spot since tracking began. The gap is small - just $4 billion. But the trend behind it is not.
How Meta Caught Up
The short answer is AI. Meta built a tool called Advantage+ that uses AI to create, target, and place ads for brands. It does the work that used to take a whole ad team. Brands say it gets better results with less effort. That's pulling more spending toward Meta.
Meta's ad sales are growing at 24.1% this year. Google's are growing at 11.9%. Meta is gaining ground at twice the pace. Reels is a big part of the story too. Short-form video is where eyeballs are going. Meta's Reels is stealing ad dollars from YouTube. On top of that, Meta is now selling ads on WhatsApp and Threads for the first time. Those are two new cash lanes that didn't exist a year ago. In plain terms: Meta has more places to show ads, better tools to target them, and faster growth. That combo is what's pushing it past Google.
How Big Is This Market?
The global market for digital ads is worth about $1 trillion in 2026. Meta, Google, and Amazon control about 62% of that total. The rest is split among thousands of smaller firms. Last year's numbers: In 2025, Meta made about $196 billion in ad sales. Google was well ahead at roughly $214 billion. The gap was $18 billion. This year, Meta closed that entire gap and then some. That's how fast things have moved.
What It Means for Investors
For Meta owners, the ad story has never looked stronger. The company is growing fast, adding new ad platforms, and using AI to pull ahead. If this trend holds, 2027 could see Meta extend its lead even further. For Google owners, the question is clear. Can Google's own AI tools close the growth gap? Or will it keep losing share to a rival that's moving faster? One thing to watch: Google still has a huge edge in search ads. When someone types a query into Google, the ads that show up are worth a lot. Meta can't touch that. But display ads, video ads, and social ads are all moving toward Meta. That's where the shift is happening.
What to Watch
Both firms report earnings later this month. Ad revenue will be the line that matters most for both stocks. If Meta's growth stays above 20% and Google's stays below 12%, the gap will only grow from here.
What This Means for Other Stocks
This isn't just a two-company story. If Meta is pulling ad spend away from Google, it's also pulling from smaller ad firms, news sites, and other platforms. That ripple effect hits any stock that depends on ad dollars for revenue.
For investors who own both Meta and Google, this shift matters for how you weigh them. Meta is the growth story right now. Google is the cash cow that needs to prove it can keep up.
