Eight thousand suspended Google Business Profiles is a lot of data. After handling that many cases across the US and UK — everything from single-location salons to multi-site law firms — patterns emerge that you simply cannot see from the outside. The same mistakes, the same misunderstandings, the same avoidable triggers, appearing again and again regardless of industry or location.
This post is everything I’ve learned from those 8,000+ cases. If your listing is currently suspended, or if you’re worried about protecting one that’s live, this is the most useful thing you’ll read today.
Why This Happens
Google doesn’t suspend listings arbitrarily. Every suspension is triggered by something — but that something is often invisible to the business owner, because it happened weeks or months before the suspension notice arrived.
Google’s systems are crawling your listing continuously, cross-referencing your address against street view data, comparing your business name against competitors and directories, and flagging inconsistencies that you’d never think twice about. By the time you wake up to a “This business has been suspended” message, the decision has already been made algorithmically — and in many cases, reviewed by a human and confirmed.
What makes this genuinely hard is that Google rarely tells you why. The suspension notice is intentionally vague. That’s not an accident — it’s policy. Which means most business owners spend days guessing, make the wrong appeal, and end up worse off than when they started.
The Most Common Causes
In the 8,000+ cases we’ve handled, the vast majority trace back to one of six root causes.
1. Address problems. This is the single biggest one. Virtual offices, co-working spaces, UPS store addresses, and residential addresses that don’t match what’s visible on Street View are all triggers. Google’s guidelines explicitly prohibit PO boxes and addresses that aren’t staffed during stated hours. A lot of businesses don’t realise they’re in violation until the suspension hits.
2. Business name manipulation. Adding keywords to your name — “Smith Plumbing | Emergency Plumber Birmingham” — is against Google’s guidelines. We see this constantly, even on listings that have been live for years. Google has been cracking down hard since 2022.
3. Duplicate listings. Old listings from a previous owner, a previous address, or a previous agency that never got cleaned up properly. Google flags the active one and can suspend both.
4. Category misuse. Selecting high-authority categories to capture search traffic in areas where you don’t actually operate. A locksmith in Leeds selecting categories for Manchester services — that kind of thing.
5. Suspicious edits. If an unverified third party (often a spammy SEO agency) suggested edits to your listing and those were accepted, Google may flag your account.
6. Guideline changes you weren’t aware of. Google updated its GBP guidelines significantly in 2021, 2022, and again in 2023. Listings that were previously compliant became non-compliant overnight, and owners had no idea.
Step-by-Step: What to Do
The most common mistake I see is business owners filing an appeal immediately — before they’ve identified what actually triggered the suspension. Appealing without fixing the underlying issue doesn’t just fail, it can reset the clock and make future appeals harder.
Here’s what the process should look like:
Step 1: Don’t touch anything yet. Seriously. Don’t edit the listing, don’t request a new verification, don’t file an appeal. Give yourself 24 hours to assess.
Step 2: Audit your listing against Google’s current guidelines. Go through every field — business name, address, phone number, categories, hours, website URL. Compare everything against what’s on your website, your Companies House or Secretary of State filing, and any major directories (Yelp, Bing Places, Apple Maps). Inconsistencies across these sources are often what triggered the suspension.
Step 3: Identify the likely cause. Based on our real recovery cases, most suspensions have one primary trigger. Find it before you do anything else.
Step 4: Fix the underlying issue. This step is non-negotiable. Appealing over an unfixed problem is wasted effort.
Step 5: Gather documentation. This is where most DIY appeals fall apart. Google needs to see that your business is real, that it operates at the address you’ve listed, and that it’s legitimately what it claims to be. This means utility bills, lease agreements, business licences, photos of signage, photos of the interior with staff present, and in some cases a video walkthrough of the premises. The specific documents required vary by suspension type — a hard GBP suspension needs a more substantial evidence package than a soft suspension.
Step 6: Submit through the correct channel. The Business Redressal Complaint Form, the GBP support chat, and the reinstatement request form are three different things. Using the wrong one delays the process significantly.
Step 7: Follow up without harassing. Google’s review timelines have lengthened considerably since 2022. Submitting multiple appeals in quick succession flags your account as a problem case.
How Long This Takes
Honest answer: it depends on the suspension type and the strength of your documentation.
Soft suspensions with clean documentation can resolve in 5 to 14 business days. Hard suspensions — where Google has made a deliberate policy determination — typically take 3 to 6 weeks when handled correctly, and can stretch beyond that if appeals are mishandled.
We get calls every week from business owners who’ve been fighting a suspension for 60, 90, even 120 days on their own. The issue is almost never that the appeal is impossible — it’s that the first few attempts were handled incorrectly and each failed appeal made the next one harder.
Reinstatement help at that point involves unwinding the damage from prior appeals as much as addressing the original cause. It’s more complicated, but most listings can still be recovered.
A Real Example
A roofing contractor in Houston came to us after his listing had been suspended for 11 days. He’d already filed two appeals himself, both rejected. By the time he called us, he estimated he’d missed 40-plus inbound calls. For a roofing business in a city the size of Houston, that’s easily $15,000+ in lost revenue over less than two weeks.
When we reviewed his listing, the primary issue was a virtual office address — his accountant had registered the business address there years ago for mail purposes, and it had been carried across into Google. Street View showed no signage, no business presence, nothing. His two prior appeals hadn’t mentioned this at all, so Google had no reason to reverse the decision.
We rebuilt the evidence package around his actual operating address — photos, a lease agreement on his storage yard, vehicle signage, and a full photo set of his team on a job site with location data intact. We resubmitted through the correct channel with a clear written explanation. Listing was reinstated within nine days.
What to Avoid
Stop posting in the GBP community forum asking Google employees to manually review your case. It doesn’t work like that, and it wastes time you don’t have.
Don’t create a new listing while your original is suspended. Google will suspend the new one and flag your account for attempted circumvention.
Don’t pay someone on Fiverr £50 to “fix” your suspension. I’ve seen the aftermath of those attempts. They almost always involve submitting templated appeals that Google’s reviewers recognise on sight.
And don’t assume that because you’ve had the listing for five years without problems, the suspension is a mistake that will self-correct. It won’t.
How We Can Help
As a Google Partner agency, we see this pattern constantly — businesses that have been suspended for weeks, tried everything they can find online, and are no closer to a resolution than day one. GBP Fixers exists specifically for this situation.
We review the suspension, identify the actual cause, build an evidence package appropriate to the suspension type, and submit through the correct channel with the right documentation framing. We’ve handled suspended Google Business Profiles across more than 30 industries and both sides of the Atlantic.
Most businesses do recover from this — including listings denied 3+ times before they reached us.
If your listing has disappeared or been suspended, the fastest path forward is a proper assessment before taking any action. Contact our team for a free case review.