Choosing a screen-basedAmazon Echo Showrather than a speaker opens up a number ofnew possibilities for your smart home hub. However, that screen also opens up the possibility for more ads. I love my Alexa, but always found the on-screen ads intrusive – that is, until I learned how to remove all the spam from an Echo Show. If you want to keep your Echo Show from showing ads on its rotating screensaver, there is a way to disable many of the ads that pop up on the screen.
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How to turn off Amazon ads on an Echo Show
You will need to toggle off more than one option
The list of possible home content is a long one, and turning off all ads will require toggling off more than one of the categories. You can choose to toggle off everything and instead set your Echo Show up like a digital picture frame. However, be sure to read everything that you are toggling off, as turning all home content options off will also disable things like notifications and news and weather reports.
Some of the biggest culprits for advertising that you’ll want to be sure to toggle off to eliminate Amazon spam from your Echo Show includeShopping Inspiration,Shopping Recommendations, andYour Frequent Orders. Shopping Inspiration delivers general ads for popular products on Amazon. Shopping Recommendations are personalized ads for Amazon products based on your previous purchases. The Your Frequent Orders option will display reminder ads to order again on products that you regularly repeat purchases.

While those three options are the biggest culprits of Amazon ads on the Echo Show, if you want to rid the screen of as many products as possible, there are other options to toggle off as well. TheEntertainment optionswill display suggested videos – these are free, but if you don’t want to see these, simply toggle off the Entertainment option. TheFire TV and Video Gamessuggestions are similar.Explore Local Placesallows local businesses to pop up on your show and could be another option you wish to disable.
How to adjust third-party advertising preferences on Amazon Echo devices
While the Echo Show home screen is one of the main culprits for ads, another culprit is theadvertising IDsthat Amazon uses to share your interests with third parties. Interest-based ads are those that highlight products based on your previous Amazon-connected interactions. For example, if you use your Echo Show to look up recipes, you could see ads for products related to those recipes on a website. Alexa shares this data in order to deliver personalized ads when using third-party Skills activated on your device. While these advertising IDs are not linked with identifying information such as a name or email, you may want to turn them off. While turning these settings off won’t eliminate ads, it will instead deliver generalized ads rather than messages tied to your interests.
The advertising preferences on your Alexa account control interest-based ads across all Echo devices, including the Echo Show as well as smart speakers and the Alexa app. There are two ways to adjust the Alexa ad privacy settings, on the Echo Show itself or inside the Alexa app. This setting affects your entire Alexa account, so you only need to do this once, even if you own multiple Echo devices.

To adjust advertising preferences on the Echo Show:
To adjust advertising preferences from within the Alexa app:
Q: Can you turn off all Echo Show ads?
Alexa users can turn off screen-based ads on an Echo Show device by disabling the home content settings using the steps listed above. This prevents Amazon product recommendations from being displayed on the screen. While this requires disabling several toggles rather than one, it’s possible to have the screen show only photos and a clock instead of ads and suggestions.
However, besides home screen content, many other Alexa Skills may also have their own ads. For example, if you ask Alexa to play music but don’t have a music subscription service, Alexa will play ad-supported music. This is true for many free music and video services compatible with the Echo Show, as those ads are what allow the company to continue providing their services at no cost to listeners. Besides Alexa’s own ad-supported free music, ads will also come into play in third-party music and video services as well, such as iHeart Radio.The only way around this is to use a service that is supported by a paid subscription rather than one that is ad-supported.Amazon Music, which is part of a Prime subscription, is ad-free. Many of the Amazon Music Unlimited plans are also ad-free. Many third-party music services that offer paid, ad-free options, like Spotify and Apple Music will also work with Alexa. The same is true with watching videos from the Echo Show – you’ll have to choose a platform that offers ad-free options if you really want to rid the Echo Show of all ads.

