By now, most marketers understand what Made-for-Advertising (MFA) sites are and why they matter. The challenge is not awareness. The challenge is execution. Because MFA exposure does not happen in one obvious place. It shows up:
And most importantly, it compounds quietly over time. Avoiding MFA is not about flipping one setting. It requires a combination of planning, setup, and ongoing monitoring.
Most MFA problems start before a campaign even launches. When planning campaigns, teams typically focus on:
But rarely define inventory quality thresholds upfront. That is the gap. What strong planning looks like:
Define what acceptable inventory means for your brand
Because once campaigns scale, MFA finds its way in unless it is explicitly blocked.
One of the biggest misconceptions is that MFA can be solved with static blocklists. It cannot. MFA sites evolve quickly. New domains appear, old ones rebrand, and patterns shift.
For example, Peer39’s Safe from MFA / Safe from Made-for-Advertising approach allows buyers to:
This is critical because MFA is a behavior, not just a domain list.
Many campaigns still optimize at the domain level. The problem is that MFA often exists within otherwise legitimate domains or across large networks that look acceptable at a surface level. That is where contextual and page-level signals matter.
This aligns with a broader industry shift: you cannot optimize what you cannot see. And visibility needs to happen at the page and content level, not just the URL.
Even well-configured campaigns drift. Supply changes. Auction dynamics shift. New MFA inventory enters the ecosystem. This is why monitoring is not optional.
Across Peer39 case studies, campaigns that actively monitor and exclude MFA consistently see:
And importantly, once exclusions are applied, the results stabilize.
One of the reasons MFA persists is because it can look efficient on the surface. High CTR. Low CPC. Scaled reach. But those metrics can hide underlying inefficiencies. This mirrors a broader industry lesson: Performance metrics without quality context are incomplete. As seen in broader Peer39 benchmark findings, relying on a single metric does not tell the full story. The same principle applies to MFA.
Because when MFA is removed, what you gain is not just performance lift. You gain clarity.
As budgets increase and competition intensifies, inefficiency becomes more expensive. MFA is not just noise in the system, it actively distorts performance signals, inflates perceived scale, and slows down optimization. The advertisers who will outperform in 2026 are not the ones trying to eliminate MFA entirely, but the ones who proactively control for it through smarter planning, stronger pre-bid strategies, and ongoing visibility into inventory quality.
Avoiding MFA is not a one-time fix, it is an ongoing discipline built into how campaigns are set up and optimized. Without it, performance signals become unreliable and optimization decisions are based on flawed data. With the right controls in place, teams can reduce wasted spend, trust their results, and make faster, more confident decisions. The advantage is not just cleaner inventory, it is knowing your performance is actually real.