448

I would like to be able to detect if the user is using adblocking software when they visit my website. If they are using it, I want to display a message asking them to turn it off in order to support the project, like this website does.

If you enter to that site and your browser has some kind of adblock software enabled, then the site instead of showing the actual ads shows a little banner telling the users that the ad revenue is used for hosting the project and they should consider turning Adblock off.

I want to do that on my website, I'm using adsense ads on it, How can I do that?

7
  • 2
    possible duplicate of Detecting AdBlocking software? Dec 17, 2014 at 21:03
  • 6
    For users looking for a latest solution, please know that there is a comprehensive pluggable solution available at github.com/sitexw/BlockAdBlock
    – yeaske
    Sep 29, 2015 at 15:02
  • 8
    Some people simply don't like to be analysed and advertised at on the web. Some sites I've visited, telling us that the revenue supports their project, are so bogged down in ads it becomes ridiculous.
    – user1945782
    Mar 29, 2016 at 7:49
  • 12
    Now that sites are doing this more and more (and abusing it, and lying to us about their ads being unintrusive, and forcing us to whitelist their whole site just to enter...) -- Are there any extensions or tricks we can use to prevent them from detecting we use AdBlock+? -- I don't mind seeing a few targeted banner ads here or there, but click jacking, and constant full screen video pop-ups are not my thing guys. Aug 2, 2016 at 19:51
  • 3
    As a recommendation: If you can tell people are using an adblocker, telling them to 'stop' isn't really going to help you much, and blocking content generally just annoys people. I always recommend, if you can tell they're using adblock, simply have some locally-hosted test ads. These generally get more clickthrough and higher payout anyway, or have a cheap lifetime membership that comes with ad-free and advertise that in the ad space. And never block content as them sharing it is free WOM for your site.
    – lilHar
    Jan 8, 2018 at 20:57

48 Answers 48

502

My solution is not specific to a certain ad network and is very lightweight. I've been running it in production for a few years. AdBlock blocks all URLs containing the word "ads" or "prebid". So this is what I did:

I added a small js file to my webroot with the name prebid-ads.js

This is the only line of code in that file. Update 2022-04-26 Call this variable something else, see below!

var canRunAds = true;

Then somewhere in your page:

<html>
  <head>
    <script src="/js/prebid-ads.js"></script>
  </head>
  <body>
    <script>
      if( window.canRunAds === undefined ){
        // adblocker detected, show fallback
        showFallbackImage();
      }
    </script>
  </body>
</html>

Update 2022-04-26 uBlock Origin loads their own ads-prebid.js that reverts the trick described in this answer (proud!), their file contains the following:

(function() {
    'use strict';
    window.canRunAds = true;
    window.isAdBlockActive = false;
})();

As a solution just rename your canRunAds variable to something fun, like window.adsAreWithUs or window.moneyAbovePrivacy.

Discovery and workaround by Ans de Nijs. Thanks!

Supporting extensions

Files like ads.js are blocked by at least these adblockers on Chrome:

  • AdBlock
  • Adblock Plus
  • Adblock Pro
  • Ghostery

Does not work with:

Privacy Badger

25
  • 3
    can you give the full link of js/ads.js please? as I am in blogger i had to upload the .js somewhere (like:Google Drive) and the link in that case does not contain ads . It would be really helpful if you give the link of your file.
    – Deb
    Jul 27, 2014 at 13:21
  • 126
    The file only contains the words "var canRunAds = true;" so just create it yourself.
    – timing
    Aug 6, 2014 at 17:15
  • 10
    Some ad blockers seem to not block the ads.js file, like for me, simple adblock for chrome.
    – Mgamerz
    Nov 25, 2014 at 17:26
  • 10
    You could also try to run an ajax request on a URL blocked by an adblocker. If it succeeds, there's no adblocker, if it fails, there's an adblocker.
    – SethWhite
    Nov 16, 2015 at 19:10
  • 3
    I'm using AdBlock Plus, the ads.js solution worked nicely for a while, but at one point they made it smarter and thus now neither ads.js nor prebid-ads.js works. However, ads-prebid.js does seem to work.
    – John Weisz
    Apr 9, 2021 at 10:04
145

Not a direct answer, but I'd put the message behind the ad to be loaded... rather than trying to detect it, it'd just show up when the ad doesn't.

3
  • 6
    Users can still block these blocked ad notices using Adblock: that's the only flaw that I know of. Aug 17, 2013 at 22:55
  • 28
    It may be easy but it's not proper way to do it, if your layout gets distorted or ad loads slowly, user can catch a glimpse of error that doesn't relate to him. Also be aware that Adblock is taking measures to block obtrusive messages targeted at ABP users. If you want to ask user for unblocking, do it through simple hideable message that sits outside layout (doesn't push other elements away). Look at duckduckgo.com/?q=foo+bar with adblock enabled.
    – Xeevis
    Apr 30, 2014 at 12:42
  • 1
    @Xeevis -- what am I looking for? -- I think AdBlock+ already blocks whatever duckduckgo is doing. Aug 2, 2016 at 20:03
133

async function detectAdBlock() {
  let adBlockEnabled = false
  const googleAdUrl = 'https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js'
  try {
    await fetch(new Request(googleAdUrl)).catch(_ => adBlockEnabled = true)
  } catch (e) {
    adBlockEnabled = true
  } finally {
    console.log(`AdBlock Enabled: ${adBlockEnabled}`)
  }
}
detectAdBlock()

11
  • 5
    To prevent glitches you can add testAd.style.display = 'absolute' and move it off the screen
    – Gerald
    Sep 24, 2016 at 1:47
  • 4
    good solution, but for ones who suffer from the 100ms delay I suggest adding something like this to doc body: <div id="detect" class="ads ad adsbox doubleclick ad-placement carbon-ads" style="background-color:red;height:300px;width:300px;position: absolute;left:0;top:0;">&nbsp;</div> (of course after testing css should be changed to <div id="detect" class="ads ad adsbox doubleclick ad-placement carbon-ads" style="height:1px;width:1px;position: absolute;left:-999px;top:-999px;">&nbsp;</div> ) Nov 7, 2016 at 10:29
  • 3
    @Gerald Good point. but AFAIK, absolute is a position value.
    – Em Seven
    Nov 11, 2016 at 6:18
  • 2
    Note that this does not work for AdBlock for Firefox
    – Eda190
    Sep 30, 2017 at 15:31
  • 1
    Doesn't work with Fair Adblock by STANDS chrome plug-in for me. May 16, 2018 at 4:46
106

http://thepcspy.com/read/how_to_block_adblock/

With jQuery:

function blockAdblockUser() {
    if ($('.myTestAd').height() == 0) {
        window.location = 'http://example.com/AdblockNotice.html';
    }
}

$(document).ready(function(){
    blockAdblockUser();
});

Of course, you would need to have a landing page for AdblockNotice.html, and the .myTestAd class needs to reflect your actual ad containers. But this should work.

EDIT

As TD_Nijboer recommends, a better way is to use the :hidden (or :visible, as I use below) selector so that display: none is also checked:

function blockAdblockUser() {
    if ($('.myTestAd').filter(':visible').length == 0) {
        // All are hidden, or "not visible", so:
        // Redirect, show dialog, do something...
    } else if ($('.myTestAd').filter(':hidden').length > 0) {
        // Maybe a different error if only some are hidden?
        // Redirect, show dialog, do something...
    }
}

Of course, both of these could be combined into one if block if desired.

Note that visibility: hidden will not be captured by either as well (where the layout space stays, but the ad is not visible). To check that, another filter can be used:

$('.myTestAd').filter(function fi(){
    return $(this).css('visibility') == 'hidden';
})

Which will give you an array of ad elements which are "invisible" (with any being greater than 0 being a problem, in theory).

7
  • 18
    Redirecting in this case is a bad idea. If your advertising service goes down, all visitors could be redirected to that page. I'd also recommend using the window onload event rather than document ready.
    – Andy E
    Feb 6, 2014 at 9:26
  • 1
    a better way of detecting would be $('.myTestAd').is(":hidden"); as the manual specifies it also detects if the width/height is 0 and if display = none.
    – Nijboer IT
    Feb 18, 2014 at 10:00
  • 7
    Redirecting in this case is a bad idea. If your advertising service goes down, all visitors could be redirected to that page. Indeed. Not to mention that they would simply throw together a simple script to defeat the counter-measure. Besides, do you really thing that by being aggressive and forceful that users will be motivated to disable their ad-blockers? No, all it would accomplish would be to piss them off and sour them against your site. Most sites opt to simply display a message rather than get hostile.
    – Synetech
    Mar 20, 2014 at 19:45
  • This doesn't work for me in Chrome. In the DOMReady event, the ad still seems to be visible.
    – nwellnhof
    May 28, 2014 at 13:26
  • 5
    Please don't prevent users from entering your site because they have ads disabled -- that just escalates the arms race. -- If you ask us kindly to turn them on, we might just do it -- if you try to force us, we'll either just stop going to your site, or we'll report a bug on our adblocker, and get it fixed for your site. -- This is the exact type of behavior that adblockers exist to protect users from. Aug 2, 2016 at 20:07
56

Most ads are dynamically loaded in javascript. I just used the onerror event to detect whether the ad script could be loaded or not. Seems to work.

Example with GoogleAds:

<script async src="//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js" onerror="adBlockFunction();"></script>

This can be used on other elements as well to see if an ad blocker is blocking the content. This method can produce false positives if the remote elements doesn't exist or cannot be reached.

5
  • 3
    This is one of the best ways to check if the ad is loaded or not..because manually loading your own script relying on the blocker to block that one is going to fail at times..
    – MaZZly
    Feb 9, 2016 at 16:06
  • 1
    This seems to be the best solution for dynamically loaded scripts.
    – Carca
    Jun 21, 2016 at 18:32
  • 1
    Don't know if something has changed since this was written, but I cannot get onerror to fire with Fair Adblock by STANDS chrome plug-in.
    – Melchester
    Jan 29, 2018 at 2:00
  • as of March 2018, still the best, simple and definite solution Mar 7, 2018 at 21:41
  • 1
    like said above its not work with fair adblocker, it better to check offsetHeight
    – cieunteung
    Feb 22, 2019 at 8:15
20

To detect if the user is blocking ads, all you have to do is find a function in the ad javascript and try testing for it. It doesn't matter what method they're using to block the ad. Here's what it looks like for Google Adsense ads:

if(!window.hasOwnProperty('google_render_ad') || window.google_render_ad === undefined) { 
    //They're blocking ads, display your banner
}

This method is outlined here: http://www.metamorphosite.com/detect-web-popup-blocker-software-adblock-spam

3
  • 9
    google_render_ad is now undefined anytime, typeof(window.google_jobrunner) != 'object' works for me. Mar 10, 2013 at 16:31
  • 5
    Since it's not code you control, I think its a bad idea to rely on this, since a refactor of the library will cause your script to detect ad block for all users. Aug 27, 2015 at 14:59
  • 2
    typeof is an overhead if you check object's property. Use simple === undefined.
    – Robo Robok
    Aug 16, 2016 at 19:10
20

You don't need an extra HTTP request , you may simply calculate the height of a fake add.

By the way, here is a full list matching the elements that adblockers avoid rendering.

window.adBlockRunning = function() {
    return (getComputedStyle(document.getElementById("detect"))["display"] == "none") ? true : false;
  }()

console.log(window.adBlockRunning);
#detect {
  height: 1px;
  width: 1px;
  position: absolute;
  left: -999em;
  top: -999em
}
<div id="detect" class="ads ad adsbox doubleclick ad-placement carbon-ads"></div>

1
  • Doesn't work in uBlock Origin (tested Nov 9, 2022). The console always show 'false' (no ad blocker active), regardless of whether uBlock Origin is active or not.
    – av01d
    Nov 9, 2022 at 10:43
15

My advice is: don't do it!

Any scenario where you treat people as "wrongdoers" is going to result in them fighting back.

Here's my proposal.

Put a small unobtrusive message at the top of the page (regardless of whether ads are being blocked) with the text I *totally* respect your right to block ads and a link to another page/pop-up entitled Read more ....

On the other page, make it clear that you understand it's their computer and they are free to use ad blocking.

Also make it clear in a non-accusatory way that the use of these blockers makes it more difficult for you to deliver great content (explaining why in detail) and that, while you'd prefer the ad blocking to not happen on your site, it's totally their decision. Focus on the positives of turning off blocking.

Those who are vehemently opposed to ads will ignore this but you never stood a chance of convincing them anyway. Those who are indifferent may well be swayed by your appeal since you're not doing the whole "let me get my way or I'll take my ball and go home" thing that honestly should be the exclusive domain of five year old children.

Remember, no-one held a gun to your head and forced you to put your stuff on the net. Treat your readership/users with respect and you'll probably find a good number of them will reciprocate.

2
  • 5
    How about "It looks like you use an ad blocker. That’s cool! So do we :) Please support X by telling your friends about us!"
    – ADTC
    Sep 1, 2016 at 8:57
  • 1
    @ADTC, that approach works as well, since there's no "you're the bad guy" message being sent. Instead , it recognises reality and attempts to bond with the reader, something that's far more likely to elicit a positive reaction.
    – paxdiablo
    Feb 25, 2021 at 23:46
13

My easiest solution with jquery is:

$.ajax({
    url: "/scripts/advertisement.js", // this is just an empty js file
    dataType: "script"
}).fail(function () {
    // redirect or display message here
});

advertisement.js just contains nothing. When somebody uses adblock, it fails and the function gets called.

0
13

Just add small script on your site:

var isAdsDisplayed = true;

With name adsbygoogle.js

Then do following:

<script src="/js/adsbygoogle.js"></script>
<script>
if(window.isAdsDisplayed === undefined ) {
  // AdBlock is enabled. Show message or track custom data here
}
</script>

Found this solution here

0
11

I know there are already enough answers, but since this question comes up on Google searched for "detect adblock" at the topic, I wanted to provide some insight in case you're not using adsense.

Specifically, with this example you can detect if the default Adblock-list provided by Firefox Adblock is used. It takes advantage that in this blocklist there is an element blocked with the CSS id #bottomAd. If I include such an element in the page and test for it's height, I know whether adblocking is active or not:

<!-- some code before -->
<div id="bottomAd" style="font-size: 2px;">&nbsp;</div>
<!-- some code after -->

The rest is done via the usual jQuery suspect:

$(document).ready( function() {
  window.setTimeout( function() {
    var bottomad = $('#bottomAd');
    if (bottomad.length == 1) {
      if (bottomad.height() == 0) {
        // adblocker active
      } else {
        // no adblocker
      }
    }      
  }, 1);
}

As can be seen, I'm using setTimeout with at least a timeout of 1ms. I've tested this on various browsers and most of the time, directly checking for the element in ready always returned 0; no matter whether the adblocker was active or not. I was having two ideas about this: either rendering wasn't yet done or Adblock didn't kick in yet. I didn't bother to investigate further.

3
  • I really much like this answer because it doesn't involve making extra requests are there cons for this approach instead of fake ads.js requests?
    – JeroenVdb
    Aug 25, 2015 at 13:14
  • Instead of testing length and height, can't you just use if ( $("#bottomAd").is(':hidden') ) ... ? Nov 5, 2015 at 20:34
  • @EvanLanglois, I know you asked two years ago, but your question actually interested me so I went diving for information on it. Apparently, it the .is(":hidden") check is dependent on whether both height and width are zero. If you just set height to 0, but the div still occupies a width, then it is not considered "hidden" by jQuery. So, whether you can say, .is(":hidden") is somewhat dependent on how the adblocker decides to resize/hide content.
    – Spencer D
    Aug 8, 2017 at 23:25
11

An efficient way to check if there is an adblock: Simply check if there is adblock enabled by trying to trigger the URL of google ads. If yes then run the callback_has_adblock, if not then run the callback_no_adblock. This solution costs one request more but at least it always works:

var hasAdBlock = function (callback_has_adblock, callback_no_adblock) {

    $.getScript( "https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js" )
        .done(function( script, textStatus ) {
            callback_no_adblock();
        })
        .fail(function( jqxhr, settings, exception ) {
            callback_has_adblock();
    });
};

This solution works for all kind of ads, not only google adsense.

1
  • some adblockers block jQuery, then the script doesn't run because "$ is not defined". Better use pure js.
    – nyx
    Mar 10, 2020 at 12:11
10

the safe way is to wrap your ads inside <div> and check the height

<div id="check-ab">
/* your ads code */
</div>

setTimeout(function(){
  if(document.getElementById("check-ab").offsetHeight === 0){
    console.log("ads blocked");
  }
  else{
    console.log("ads running");
  }
}, 100);

it work with adblock plus and bluehell firewall.

9

They're utilizing the fact that Google's ad code creates an iframe with the id "iframe". So as long as you don't already have something on your page with that ID, this'd work for you too.

<p id="ads">
<script type="text/javascript"><!--
google_ad_client = "their-ad-code-here";
/* 160x600, droite */
google_ad_slot = "their-ad-code-here";
google_ad_width = 160;
google_ad_height = 600;
//-->
</script>
<script type="text/javascript"
src="http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js">
</script>

</p>

<script type="text/javascript"><!--
if(document.getElementsByTagName("iframe").item(0) == null)
{
    document.write("<div style='width:160px; height:600px; padding-top: 280px; margin-left:5px;border:1px solid #000000; text-align:center; font-family:century gothic, arial, helvetica, sans serif;padding-left:5px;padding-right:5px;'>Advertising seems to be blocked by your browser.<br /><br /><span style='font-size:10px'>Please notice that advertising helps us to host the project.<br /><br />If you find these ads intrusive or inappropriate, please contact me.</span><img src='http://www.playonlinux.com/images/abp.jpg' alt='Adblock Plus' /></div>");
}
--></script>
8

I noticed previous comments uses google adsense as object to test. Some pages don't uses adsense, and using adsense block as test is not really a good idea. Because adsense block may harm your SEO. Here is example how I detect by adblocker simple blocked class:

Html:

<div class="ad-placement" id="ablockercheck"></div>
<div id="ablockermsg" style="display: none"></div>

Jquery:

$(document).ready(function()
{
   if(!$("#ablockercheck").is(":visible"))
   {
     $("#ablockermsg").text("Please disable adblocker.").show();
   }
});

"ablockercheck" is an ID which adblocker blocks. So checking it if it is visible you are able to detect if adblocker is turned On.

7

AdBlock seems to block the loading of AdSense (etc) JavaScript files. So, if you are using asynchronous version of AdSense ads you can check if adsbygoogle is an Array. This must be checked after few seconds since the asynchronous script is... asynchronous. Here is a rough outline:

window.setTimeout(function(){
    if(adsbygoogle instanceof Array) {
        // adsbygoogle.js did not execute; probably blocked by an ad blocker
    } else {
        // adsbygoogle.js executed
    }
}, 2000);

To clarify, here is an example of what the AdSense asynchronous ads code looks like:

<!-- this can go anywhere -->
<script async src="//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js"></script>

<!-- this is where the ads display -->
<ins class="adsbygoogle" ...></ins>
<script>
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});
</script>

Notice that adsbygoogle is initialized as an Array. The adsbygoogle.js library changes this array into Object {push: ...} when it executes. Checking the type of variable after a certain time can tell you if the script was loaded.

1
  • This will work most time but what if a user has a slow connection (think of mobile devices)?
    – Luca Steeb
    Mar 13, 2015 at 20:17
7
async function hasAdBlock() {
  try {
    await fetch("https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js", {
      method: "HEAD",
      mode: "no-cors",
    })
    return false;
  } catch(e) {
    return true;
  }
}
1
  • 1
    This is tight. But how do you differentiate between blocked requests (IE: net::ERR_BLOCKED_BY_CLIENT) and network issues (IE: net::ERR_NAME_NOT_RESOLVED)?
    – Lance
    Sep 29, 2021 at 19:30
7

This one works good

if there's an adBlocker it will alert you

Simply it sends a header request to a well known ad company for all ad blockers (google ads), if the request is blocked then adbloker exists.

checkAdBlocker();

function checkAdBlocker() {
    try {
        fetch(
            new Request("https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js", {
                method: 'HEAD',
                mode: 'no-cors'
            })).catch(error => {
            showNotification()
        });
    } catch (e) {
        // Request failed, likely due to ad blocker
        showNotification()
    }
}

function showNotification() {
    alert("Please disable adBlocker")
}

3
  • 1
    please explain a bit about it Jan 25, 2022 at 5:11
  • 1
    @PawanDeore OK added explanation to the code
    – Mas
    Aug 15, 2022 at 22:40
  • 3
    This does not work, ublock origin for example will spoof the response and return a valid js file that will act as if adsense has loaded
    – dcohenb
    Oct 8, 2022 at 8:11
7

[October 2022 - uBlock Origin, Adblock Plus, Brave browser]

Ad blockers are very smart these days, they can even spoof ad server requests with redirects and return fake responses. Below is the only good solution I've found and it works with even the best ad blocker extensions (like uBlock Origin, Adblock Plus) and in-browser ad blockers (like Brave, Opera) that I've tested. It works with those that block access to the ad server, as well as those that spoof it. It works with any ad provider, not just Google! It uses Google ad service exclusively for detection, because it's blocked by all blockers, its availability is always high and it's fast.

The smartest ad blockers don't block, they redirect requests and return fake 'successful' responses. As of now, Google never redirects the request, so we can detect the redirect and thus the blocker.

Important:

  • we only send a HEAD request, which runs quickly and does not burden the client's data traffic
  • adsbygoogle.js must be called with the full original path, which is on the blacklist of every ad blocker (don't copy the js to your own website!)

You can use this solution anywhere (<head>/<body>) and anytime. Try it here directly by hitting Run code snippet in any browser with any ad blocker:

function detectAdblock(callback) {
    fetch('https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js', {
        method: 'HEAD',
        mode: 'no-cors',
    }).then((response) => {
        // If the request is redirected, then the ads are blocked.
        callback(response.redirected)
    }).catch(() => {
        // If the request fails completely, then the ads are blocked.
        callback(true)
    })
}

detectAdblock((isAdblockerDetected) => {
    console.log(`ads are ${isAdblockerDetected ? 'blocked' : 'not blocked'}`)
});

3
  • 1
    Doesn't work for uBlock origin in Firefox (as of November 2022). Will always say "ads are not blocked", regardless whether the adblocker is active or not.
    – av01d
    Nov 9, 2022 at 10:28
  • Note: As you make a request to Google services, you also give them the IP address of the sender, wich have repercussions in EU's RGPD rules (IP addresses can be used to identify an individual connecting to your site)
    – Eli O.
    Apr 10, 2023 at 13:33
  • also add a check in the catch() if its network error or not. like if the user net is offline , etc... because this can trigger adblock in that case Jul 4, 2023 at 18:39
6

This approach I use on my site, maybe you will find it helpful. In my opinion, it's the simpliest solution.

AdBlocker blocks specific classes and html elements, by inspecting these selectors of any blocked ads in developer console (they are all listed) you can see which elements will be always blocked.

E.g. just inspect this question page on stackoverflow and you will see bunch of blocked ads.

For example, any element with bottom-ad class is automatically blocked.

  1. I created a non-empty div element with bottom-ad class: <div class="bottom-ad" style="width: 1px; height: 1px;">HI</div>
  2. After page loads just check if this element is hidden. I used jQuery, but feel free to use javascript: $('.bottom-ad').css('display') == "none" or even better by using $('.bottom-ad').is(':visible')

If value is true, then AdBlocker is active.

6

Most adblocker cancel HTTP request to ads.js and make 0px for the element but sometime adblocker removed the DOM, and some answer above will fail because not checking existence of the element.

Using setTimeout() is good practice because without it, will make the script race with adblocker.

The script below will check if dom exist/removed and check offsetHeight of an element if it exist.

setTimeout(function() {
  var a = document.querySelector('.showads'),
    b = a ? (a.offsetHeight ? false : true) : true;
  console.log('ads blocked?', b)
}, 200); // don't too fast or will make the result wrong.
<div class="ads showads">
  Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit.
</div>

5

html file

<script src="wp-banners.js"></script>

<script>
if(document.getElementById('LavXngdFojBe')){
  alert('Blocking Ads: No');
} else {
  alert('Blocking Ads: Yes');
}
</script>

wp-banners.js

var e=document.createElement('div');
e.id='LavXngdFojBe';
e.style.display='none';
document.body.appendChild(e);

This is also shown on https://detectadblock.com.

3
  • i want to display adblock detection as modal, i tried it , but it is not working, can you try to use that code and show in a modal? Jan 23, 2022 at 11:35
  • Trouble with this one is that the name of the script (here: wp-banners.js) changes very frequently, as Adblockers keep updating the name of the JS file they find on detectadblock.com. So: this solution might work for a few weeks, then it will break as adblockers update their algorithms.
    – av01d
    Nov 9, 2022 at 9:21
  • Did not work for me on Firefox + uBlock, even on the linked website "detectadblock.com"
    – Eli O.
    Apr 10, 2023 at 13:38
4

Despite the age of this question, I recently found it very useful and therefore can only assume there are others still viewing it. After looking here and elsewhere I surmised that the main three client side checks for indirectly detecting an ad blocker were to check for blocked div/img, blocked iframes and blocked resources (javascript files).

Maybe it's over the top or paranoid but it covers for ad blocking systems that block only one or two out of the selection and therefore may not have been covered had you only done the one check.

On the page your are running the checks add: (I am using jQuery)

<script type="text/javascript" src="jquery.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="advertisement.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="abds.js"></script>

and add the following anywhere else on the page:

<div id="myTestAd"><img src="http://placehold.it/300x250/000000/ffffff.png&text=Advert" /></div>

I used a div with a bait name as well as an externally hosted image with the text "Advert" and in dimensions used by AdSense (thanks to placehold.it!).

In advertisement.js you should append something to the document which we can check for later. Although it seems like you're doing the same as before, you are actually checking for the file (advertisement.js) itself being loaded, not the output.

$(document).ready(
{

    $("body").append("<div id=\"myTestAd2\">check</div>");

});

And then the ad blocker detection script which combines everything

$(document).ready(function()
{
    var ifr = '<iframe id="adServer" src="http://ads.google.com/adserver/adlogger_tracker.php" width="300" height="300"></iframe>';
    $("body").append(ifr);
});

$(window).on("load",function()
{

    var atb = $("#myTestAd");
    var atb2= $("#myTestAd2");
    var ifr = $("#adServer");

    setTimeout(function()
    {

        if( (atb.height()==0) ||
            (atb.filter(":visible").length==0) ||
            (atb.filter(":hidden").length>0) ||
            (atb.is("hidden")) ||
            (atb.css("visibility")=="hidden") ||
            (atb.css("display")=="none") ||
            (atb2.html()!="check") ||
            (ifr.height()!=300) ||
            (ifr.width()!=300) )
        {
            alert("You're using ad blocker you normal person, you!");
        }

    },500);

});

When the document is ready, i.e. the markup is loaded, we add the iframe to the document also. Then, when the window is loaded, i.e. the content incl. images etc. is loaded, we check:

  • The dimensions and visibility of the first test div.
  • That the content of the second test div is "check", as it would have been if the advertimsent.js was not blocked.
  • The dimensions (and I guess visibility, as a hidden object has no height or width?) of the iframe

And the styles:

div#myTestAd, iframe#adServer
{
    display: block;
    position: absolute;
    left: -9999px;
    top: -9999px;
}

div#myTestAd2
{
    display: none;
}

Hope this helps

0
3

If using the new AdSense code, you can do an easy check, with out resorting to content or css checks.

Place your ads as normal in your markup:

<ins class="adsbygoogle" style="display: block;"
   data-ad-client="ca-pub-######"
   data-ad-slot="#######"
   data-ad-format="auto"></ins>
<script>(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});</script>

Then you call the adsense code at the bottom of your page (note do not use the "async" flag when calling the adsbygoogle.js script):

<script src="//pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js"></script>

Then add this little snippit of code below that:

<script>
if (!adsbygoogle.loaded) {
   // do something to alert the user
}
</script>

AdSense always creates/sets the flag adsbygoogle.loaded to true when the ads are loaded, You could place the check in a setTimeout function to delay the check by a few seconds.

2
  • 3
    This of course depends on how the ads were blocked. If your adblocking software is preventing AdSense from loading altogether, this will work. But if your adblocking software is doing something like setting the CSS display property to "none" or height of the respective div to 0, then this may not work.
    – Bangkokian
    May 21, 2015 at 14:22
  • True. I don't think there is an easy way to catch 100% of all adblocks, but at least you can catch some of them. May 21, 2015 at 18:47
2

All of the answers above are valid, however most will not work for DNS-level ad blocking.

DNS-level ad blockers(like pi-hole) basically return NXDOMAIN(domain does not exist) for a list of ad blocking domains (e.g. telemetry.microsoft.com will "not exist" when it does).

There are a few ways to circumvent this:

Method A: Request for ads by ip address, not domain.

This method is a bit annoying as you would have to keep track of ip addresses. This will be problematic if your code isn't well maintained or updated regularly.

Method B: Block all requests that fail- even if the client reports NXDOMAIN.

This will be very annoying for users if it is a "legitimate" NXDOMAIN.

2

if you are using react with hooks:

import React, { useState, useEffect } from 'react'

const AdblockDetect = () => {
  const [usingAdblock, setUsingAdblock] = useState(false)

  let fakeAdBanner
  useEffect(() => {
    if (fakeAdBanner) {
      setUsingAdblock(fakeAdBanner.offsetHeight === 0)
    }
  })

  if (usingAdblock === true) {
    return null
  }

  return (
    <div>
      <div
        ref={r => (fakeAdBanner = r)}
        style={{ height: '1px', width: '1px', visibility: 'hidden', pointerEvents: 'none' }}
        className="adBanner"
      />
      Adblock!
    </div>
  )
}

export default AdblockDetect

2

In case you use jQuery and Google Adsense:

jQuery.getScript(
    "https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js", 
    function() {
     // Load your ad now    
}).fail(function() {
    // Google failed to load main script, do something now
});

This is easier to understand: if Google Ads main JavaScript file fails to load, AdSense won't work, so you do something using the fail function of jQuery.

The "Loads your add now" is when I append the "ins" objects, like:

jQuery(".my_ad_div").append('<ins class="adsbygoogle"
style="display:block"
data-ad-client="ca-pub-xxx"
data-ad-slot="xxx"
data-ad-format="auto"
data-full-width-responsive="true"></ins>
<script>
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});
</script>');

And in "// Google failed to load main script, do something now" I generally put images in places of ads.

1
1
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-latest.js"></script>
<script>var adb=true;</script>
<script src="./getbanner.cfm?"></script>
<script>
$(document).ready(function(){if(adb)alert('AdBlock!');});
</script>

and in getbanner.cfm file:

adb = false;

I think it's easiest way to detect adblock.

2
1

I know this is already answered, but I looked at the suggested sample site, and I see they do it like this:

<script type="text/javascript">
if(document.getElementsByTagName("iframe").item(0) == null) {
    document.write("<div style="width: 160px; height: 600px; padding-top: 280px; margin-left: 5px; border: 1px solid #666666; color: #FFF; background-color: #666; text-align:center; font-family: Maven Pro, century gothic, arial, helvetica, sans-serif; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px; border-radius: 7px; font-size: 18px;">Advertising seems to be blocked by your browser.<br><br><span style="font-size: 12px;">Please notice that advertising helps us to host the project.<br><br>If you find these ads intrusive or inappropriate, please contact me.</span><br><img src="http://www.playonlinux.com/images/abp.png" alt="Adblock Plus"></div>");
};
</script>
1

No need for timeouts and DOM sniffing. Simply attempt to load a script from popular ad networks, and see if the ad blocker intercepted the HTTP request.

/**
 * Attempt to load a script from a popular ad network. Ad blockers will intercept the HTTP request.
 *
 * @param {string} url
 * @param {Function} cb
 */
function detectAdBlockerAsync(url, cb){
    var script = document.createElement('script');

    script.onerror = function(){
        script.onerror = null;
        document.body.removeChild(script);
        cb();
    }

    script.src = url;
    document.body.appendChild(script);
}

detectAdBlockerAsync('http://ads.pubmatic.com/AdServer/js/gshowad.js', function(){
    document.body.style.background = '#c00';
});

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