Google Ads export → dashboard

Your Google Ads report, your spend dashboard.

Download a campaign report from Google Ads, drop the CSV, and see total cost, the spend trend over time, CPC and conversions by campaign — without rebuilding a pivot table.

01 · How it works

Export, drop, done.

The Google Ads UI is built for editing campaigns, not for a quick spend read. Download the campaign report and this builds the view you actually want: total cost, the daily trend, CPC and where conversions are coming from.

i. export

Download from Google Ads

Campaigns → Download → CSV. The default columns (Day, Campaign, Cost, Clicks, Conversions, Avg CPC) are all this needs.

ii. detect

Cost becomes the metric

The Cost column is recognized as currency and used as the headline metric. Day becomes the time axis automatically.

iii. read

Spend, CPC, conversions

Total cost, daily spend trend, average CPC, and conversions by campaign and campaign type — click any bar to filter.

02 · The views

The spend read Google Ads buries.

Everything you check before a budget call, arranged automatically from the raw report.

  • 01

    Cost at a glance

    Total spend up top, with the trend over time so a budget spike is obvious.

  • 02

    Cost by campaign

    The Campaign column becomes a breakdown — see which campaign eats the most budget.

  • 03

    CPC and conversions

    Average CPC and conversions sit beside spend, so efficiency reads at a glance without a formula.

  • 04

    Private by default

    Your Ads data is parsed locally. It never leaves your browser — verify in DevTools → Network.

"I drop the campaign report and the spend picture is just there — no more weekly pivot rebuild before the budget call."
— a PPC marketer
03 · FAQ

Google dashboard questions.

Which Google Ads export works?
The standard campaign report (Campaigns → Download). Any CSV with a Day date, a Cost column and a Campaign column works. Segmented reports with extra columns are fine too.
Yes. Cost is the headline metric, and Clicks, Conversions and Avg CPC ride alongside it, so you can read spend against efficiency without writing a formula.
Yes — click any bar or slice (campaign or campaign type) and the whole dashboard recomputes against that filter, including cost and conversions.
No. Parsing and aggregation happen entirely in your browser. The report file never touches a server.
No. As long as the Day column has real dates, any range works — a week or a quarter. The tool reads whatever rows the report contains.