What Is a Carousel (Ads / UI)? Types and How to Use Them Effectively, Explained Simply
July 8, 2026
Author: Shusaku Yosa
For anyone wondering "what exactly is a carousel?" or trying to understand how to use one effectively in ads and on websites, this article explains carousels in plain terms: what they are, the types used in UI and advertising, their pros and cons, and how to use them in ways that drive results.
What Is a Carousel?
A carousel is a mechanism that lets users browse multiple pieces of content, such as images or videos, within a single display area by swiping or clicking arrows to move left and right. The word "carousel" originally means a merry-go-round or rotating platform, and the format took its name from the way content rotates into view much like a merry-go-round.
Because a carousel can present a lot of information in a limited space, it is used in many contexts, including website main visuals and banner areas, social media posts, and creatives for performance advertising. It pairs well with the intuitive swipe gestures of smartphones, and now that mobile-first design has become the norm, it has established itself as a standard way to convey information in a compact footprint.
Difference from Slideshows and Sliders
Carousels are often confused with "slideshows" and "sliders." Strictly speaking, a format that loops back to the beginning once it reaches the end is a "carousel," while one that displays a series of images in order without looping is a "slideshow" or "slider." That said, all of them share the same underlying behavior of switching content in and out, and in practice the terms are frequently used almost interchangeably without a clear distinction.
Main Types of Carousels (UI)
Carousels used as UI on websites and apps can be divided into several types depending on their purpose and behavior. Let's look at the representative kinds.
- Main visual type: Placed prominently at the top of the page (the first view), switching between multiple key visuals or campaigns. It is a crucial element that shapes the first impression.
- Banner/promotional type: Groups multiple banners, such as campaigns or features, into a single frame. It lets you line up many messages in a compact space.
- Product/card type: Lines up recommended products or related content on an e-commerce site in a horizontal scroll. Users can browse actively according to their interests.
- Thumbnail-linked type: Links a main image with a row of small thumbnails so users can jump quickly to any image. It is often used on product detail pages.
In terms of behavior, there are also "auto-scroll" carousels that switch automatically after a set interval, and "manual" carousels that switch on user action. The auto type can present information one after another, but because users cannot control the switching speed, it tends to cause stress and reduce accessibility. It is important to choose manual or auto based on the amount of content and the use case.
What Are Carousel Ads? Major Supported Platforms
A carousel ad is an ad format that places multiple images or videos (cards) within a single ad slot, letting users switch between them by swiping or clicking arrows. On many platforms you can set a different visual, message, and link destination for each card, so it can convey far more information than a single static-image ad.
You can run carousel ads on platforms such as the following:
- Google Ads: Carousel-format delivery is available in Demand Gen (formerly Discovery) campaigns.
- Meta Ads (Facebook / Instagram): Supports a wide range of placements such as feeds and Stories, and is a flagship platform for carousel ads.
- LINE Ads: You can also deliver carousel-format creatives on LINE, which has a large user base in Japan.
- X (formerly Twitter) Ads: You can line up multiple cards to make your case, but note that specifications such as card link settings differ by platform.
The finer specifications and submission rules differ by platform, but the basic flow of "create campaign → select objective/format → set up creative" is common to all. Generally, you can set roughly 2 to 10 images or videos on each platform.
Pros and Cons of Carousels
Pros
- High information volume: Because you can show multiple images and videos in a single frame, you can organize and deliver information that a single static image cannot fully convey.
- Organized in a compact space: You can fit multiple pieces of content into a limited area, boosting persuasive power while keeping vertical scrolling to a minimum.
- Enables diverse messaging: You can set a different CTA and link destination per card, enabling a wide range of expression such as product catalogs, feature introductions, and story-driven messaging.
- Can improve results: Comparing multiple products and providing information in stages can spark interest and help improve conversion rates.
Cons
- Cards after the first are less likely to be seen: Because swiping is required, users often fail to notice, or simply do not view, the cards that follow.
- Usability and accessibility challenges: Auto-scroll types in particular tend to frustrate users because the switching speed cannot be controlled.
- Production takes more effort: You need to prepare multiple creatives, so the design and production load is higher than for a single-image ad.
How to Use Carousels Effectively and Key Design Points
A carousel will not deliver enough impact simply by being placed on a page. Keep the following design points in mind to turn it into results.
- Put the most important information on the first card: Since view rates drop from the second card onward, always place your core message and an eye-catching visual up front.
- Encourage users toward later cards: Build a structure that makes people want to see more, designing a flow that naturally prompts swiping.
- Give it a narrative: By unfolding from card one to card two to card three in sequence, you can convey feature explanations, usage steps, and brand worldview in stages.
- Prompt action with a clear CTA: The goal of a carousel is not to "be seen" but to "be acted on." Clearly show the next action to take on the final card.
- Prioritize mobile optimization: Design and test above all for how it looks and works on smartphones, where swiping is common.
- Analyze and improve after launch: Check the display rate and click rate of each card, and continuously refine the order and creative to maximize results.
When Carousels Are and Aren't a Good Fit
A carousel is not a cure-all; there are situations where it fits and situations where it does not. It shines when you want to compare and show multiple products or services, explain features or usage in a set order, or promote a brand in a story format. On the other hand, it is a poor choice for placing important information that you want every user to see reliably on the second card or later. Information you want to reach everyone is more reliably shown on its own, without relying on a carousel.
Summary
A carousel is a mechanism that displays multiple pieces of content by switching them within a single frame, used widely from web UI to performance advertising. It has the strengths of high information volume and space efficiency, but also the weakness that cards after the first are less likely to be seen. By keeping key points in mind—placing important information on the first card, giving it a narrative, prompting action with a clear CTA, designing mobile-first, and continuing to improve after launch—you can draw out the full effect of a carousel.


