Ads Manager creates and optimizes your ad campaigns. Business Manager organizes who has access to what. They are not competing tools — Ads Manager lives inside Business Manager. Choosing between them is like choosing between a kitchen and a house. The kitchen is part of the house.
Business Manager vs Ads Manager Comparison
| Feature | Business Manager | Ads Manager |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Manage all business assets | Create and manage ad campaigns |
| Scope | Organizational hub | Advertising execution tool |
| Relationship | Container (holds Ads Manager) | Lives inside Business Manager |
| Team Management | Full roles and permissions | Ad account-level only |
| Multiple Ad Accounts | Yes — manage many accounts | Single account view |
| Asset Coverage | Pages, Pixels, Catalogs, Apps, Instagram | Campaigns, ad sets, ads |
| Client Management | Yes (agency use case) | No |
| Billing | Multiple payment methods across accounts | Single account billing |
| Best For | Agencies, teams, multi-account setups | Solo advertisers running ads |
The core distinction: Business Manager is the organizational layer. Ads Manager is the execution layer. You need both if you are running ads at scale.

What Is Facebook Ads Manager
Ads Manager is where you build, launch, and optimize Facebook and Instagram ad campaigns. Every advertiser interacts with this tool directly.
What you do inside Ads Manager:
- Create campaigns — Choose objectives (awareness, traffic, conversions, leads), set budgets, define schedules.
- Build audiences — Define targeting by demographics, interests, behaviors, custom audiences, and lookalikes.
- Design ads — Upload creatives, write copy, select placements (Feed, Stories, Reels, Messenger).
- Monitor performance — Track metrics like CPC, CTR, ROAS, and cost per conversion in real time.
- Optimize — Adjust bids, test creative variations, refine audiences based on data.
Ads Manager works at the campaign level. It does not manage organizational permissions, team access, or cross-account operations. For a solo advertiser running one ad account, Ads Manager alone may be sufficient.

What Is Facebook Business Manager
Business Manager is the organizational shell that holds all your Meta advertising assets in one place. It is not an ad tool — it is a management tool.
What Business Manager controls:
- Ad accounts — Create and manage multiple ad accounts under one business entity.
- Pages — Connect and manage Facebook and Instagram pages.
- Pixels and tracking — Assign Meta Pixels to specific ad accounts.
- Team access — Add people with specific roles (Admin, Analyst, Advertiser) to specific assets.
- Partner access — Grant agencies or partners access to your ad accounts without sharing login credentials.
- Catalogs — Manage product catalogs for Shopping and dynamic ads.
Business Manager exists to answer one question: who has access to which assets, and what can they do with them?
For agencies managing multiple clients, Business Manager is essential. Each client’s ad account, pages, and pixels stay organized and access-controlled. Running campaigns through an agency ad account within Business Manager provides higher spend limits and priority support that standard accounts do not receive.

How They Work Together
Ads Manager and Business Manager are not alternatives. They are layers of the same system.
The hierarchy:
- Business Manager — Top-level container. Holds all assets.
- Ad Accounts — Sit inside Business Manager. Each account has its own billing and campaigns.
- Ads Manager — The interface for managing campaigns within each ad account.
When you open Ads Manager, you are already operating within Business Manager’s framework. The difference is whether you interact with the organizational layer (Business Manager) or go straight to campaign management (Ads Manager).
Practical example: An agency managing 10 clients creates one Business Manager. Inside it, they create or connect 10 ad accounts — one per client. Each team member gets specific permissions. Then they open Ads Manager to create and manage campaigns within each account.
A solo advertiser with one Facebook Page and one ad account may never consciously use Business Manager. But it is still there, running in the background.

Meta Business Suite vs Business Manager
Meta Business Suite is Meta’s newer all-in-one hub. It combines the functions of Business Manager with organic content management and analytics.
| Feature | Meta Business Suite | Business Manager |
|---|---|---|
| Organic Posting | Yes (schedule posts, Stories) | No |
| Inbox Management | Yes (Messenger, Instagram DMs) | No |
| Content Calendar | Yes | No |
| Insights | Organic + paid analytics combined | Paid only (via Ads Manager) |
| Ad Management | Yes (includes Ads Manager) | Yes (includes Ads Manager) |
| Team Management | Yes | Yes |
| Asset Management | Yes | Yes |
| Target User | SMBs managing organic + paid | Agencies and advanced advertisers |
Meta Business Suite is designed for small-to-medium businesses that want organic posting and advertising in one dashboard. Business Manager remains the preferred tool for agencies, large teams, and advertisers managing multiple accounts.
Meta is gradually merging features between the two. For now, both coexist — Business Suite for simplicity, Business Manager for control.

Which Tool Do You Need
Use Ads Manager alone if:
– You run one ad account for one business
– You are the only person managing ads
– You do not need team permissions or partner access
– Your monthly spend is under $5,000
Use Business Manager if:
– You manage multiple ad accounts
– You work with a team or agency
– You need role-based permissions
– You manage multiple Pages, Pixels, or Catalogs
– You handle client accounts
Upgrade to an agency ad account if:
– You spend $5,000+ per month
– Your ad accounts get restricted or banned
– You need higher daily spend limits
– You want priority support and faster ad approvals
– You run ads in competitive or restricted categories
Need more than a personal ad account? Rent a verified agency ad account from ADShift with higher limits, faster approvals, and dedicated support.
FAQ
Can I use Ads Manager without Business Manager?
Technically, yes — if you run ads from a personal Facebook account, you interact with Ads Manager directly. But Business Manager is active in the background. For any serious advertising, creating a Business Manager account gives you better control over assets, billing, and access.
Is Meta Business Suite replacing Business Manager?
Meta is expanding Business Suite to cover more functions, but Business Manager has not been deprecated. Agencies and advanced advertisers still rely on Business Manager for its granular permission controls and multi-account management.
Do I lose my data if I switch from Business Manager to an agency ad account?
No. An agency ad account operates within the Business Manager structure. Your existing Pages, Pixels, and audiences remain accessible. The agency account is an additional (higher-tier) ad account — it does not replace your Business Manager.
Is Business Manager free?
Yes. Business Manager is free to create and use. The costs come from advertising spend, not from the management tool itself. Agency ad accounts involve a provider fee (typically a percentage of ad spend), but Business Manager itself has no cost.
Stop struggling with the limitations of a standard ad account. A verified agency ad account from ADShift gives you the spend limits, approval speed, and account stability that serious advertisers need.





