Three thousand failed appeals. That’s not a statistic I’m proud of — but it’s one of the most valuable datasets any GBP recovery specialist will ever sit with. Because buried inside every one of those rejections is a signal. A pattern. A clue about what Google’s systems are actually looking for, versus what most business owners assume they want.
We’ve now handled over 8,000 suspended or removed Google Business Profiles across the US and UK. The failed appeals taught us more than the successful ones ever could.
Here’s what we learned.
Why This Happens
Google doesn’t suspend listings out of spite. Their systems — a mix of automated algorithms and human reviewers — flag profiles when something triggers a quality or policy concern. The problem is that the system isn’t always right, and the appeals process doesn’t reward emotion, urgency, or long explanations about how many years you’ve been in business.
What it rewards is evidence. Specific, structured, verifiable evidence.
Most business owners don’t know this when they file their first appeal. So they write a paragraph explaining their situation, upload a utility bill, hit submit, and wait. Then they get the rejection. Then they do it again, with a slightly longer explanation. Rejected again. By the third attempt, they’ve trained Google’s system to treat their profile as a persistent problem rather than a legitimate business waiting to be reinstated.
That’s the cycle we break every single day.
The Most Common Causes
We get calls every week from owners who have no idea why their listing was suspended. That’s actually very common — Google rarely explains the specific trigger. But after reviewing thousands of cases, these are the patterns that show up again and again.
Inconsistent business information. Your GBP says one address. Your website footer says another. Your Companies House registration or state business filing says a third. Google’s crawlers cross-reference these signals, and inconsistency reads as a red flag — even if the differences are trivial, like “Suite 4B” versus “Unit 4B.”
Virtual offices and shared addresses. This is a landmine. If your registered address is a mail forwarding service, a co-working space shared by dozens of other businesses, or a UPS Store, you’re at high risk. Google explicitly prohibits listings that use these as their primary location. We’ve seen entire clusters of businesses suspended when one address gets flagged and the system pulls everyone registered there.
Sudden profile edits before or after a review spike. Changing your business name, category, or service area right after receiving a flurry of reviews — positive or negative — can trigger an automated flag. The timing looks manipulative to the algorithm, even when the edit was legitimate.
Keyword stuffing in the business name. “Dave’s Plumbing – Emergency Plumber London 24/7” isn’t a business name. Google knows that. And they’ll suspend the listing for it.
Service-area businesses operating in restricted categories. Locksmiths, garage door companies, water damage restoration, and certain financial services are under elevated scrutiny because these categories have historically been abused by lead-gen spam. If you’re a legitimate business in one of these niches, you need more documentation, not less.
Step-by-Step: What to Do
This is where most guides let you down. They’ll say “gather your documents” without telling you what Google actually needs to see.
Step 1: Don’t file another appeal until you’ve audited your profile. Every failed appeal narrows your window. Before you submit anything, go through every data point on your profile — name, address, phone, website, categories, hours — and cross-reference them against your website, your state or Companies House registration, and any other directory listings you have (Yelp, Bing Places, Apple Maps). The goal is zero discrepancies.
Step 2: Build your evidence bundle properly. A utility bill alone isn’t enough — and hasn’t been for years. Google wants to see multiple corroborating signals: a business bank statement with your trading name and address, a signage photo, a lease agreement or mortgage statement if you own the premises, staff photos inside the location, and ideally a timestamped video walkthrough. The Business Redressal Complaint Form and the standard reinstatement form have different use cases — filing the wrong one is a common mistake that wastes weeks.
Step 3: Request video verification if it’s offered. Not every business qualifies, but for many suspended profiles, video verification is now the fastest route back. A Google agent connects with you via video call, verifies you’re at the physical location, and confirms the business is real. We prepare clients for exactly what the agent needs to see during that call — because walking in unprepared is how people fail it.
Step 4: If the listing has a hard suspension — meaning it was removed for policy violations rather than just flagged for verification — the reinstatement path is different. A hard GBP suspension requires a formal appeal with a full evidence bundle submitted through the correct channel. The appeal itself needs to be structured, calm, and factual. No emotional appeals. No long backstories. Just clean, verifiable evidence presented in a logical order.
How Long This Takes
Honest answer: anywhere from 48 hours to 12 weeks, depending on the suspension type and how many times the listing has already been appealed.
For a straightforward verification issue with clean documentation, resolution can happen within a few days via video verification. For a hard suspension in a high-scrutiny category like water damage restoration or locksmith services — especially if there have been multiple failed appeals — you’re often looking at several weeks minimum.
For a home services business, each day offline can mean $500–$2,000+ in lost inbound leads. We worked with a roofing contractor in Atlanta who lost 11 days of visibility during their busiest spring season. Their estimate, based on average ticket size and typical monthly call volume, was over $14,000 in missed revenue. They’d filed two appeals themselves before they called us.
A Real Example
A dental practice in Manchester came to us after three rejected appeals. They’d been suspended for what Google classified as a policy violation — their listing had been edited multiple times in a short window, and their address didn’t match their NHS registration exactly.
You can see similar recovery cases on our case studies page — the pattern is remarkably consistent. The problem is almost never what the business owner thinks it is.
In this case, the practice had updated their phone number, then their hours, then added a service category — all within about two weeks of receiving a spike in Google reviews. The algorithm read the combination as suspicious behaviour. Their appeals had been emotional and detailed, explaining their patient history and how long they’d been operating. None of that was relevant to what Google needed to see.
We rebuilt the evidence bundle, corrected the NHS registration discrepancy, and submitted through the reinstatement process with a structured appeal letter. The listing was reinstated within nine days.
What to Avoid
Don’t create a new listing while your suspended one is under appeal. Google will detect it, and it can permanently complicate your case.
Don’t pay for “guaranteed reinstatement” services that promise results in 24-48 hours with no review process. There is no shortcut that bypasses Google’s actual system.
Don’t keep resubmitting the same appeal with minor changes. Each rejection isn’t a reset — it’s a signal to Google’s system that the issue persists.
And don’t assume that because your business is legitimate, the appeal will handle itself. Legitimacy is necessary but not sufficient. You need to prove it in the format Google’s reviewers can act on.
How We Can Help
As a Google Partner, we work inside these systems every day. We’ve seen what gets approvals and what gets listings permanently removed. The difference is usually not the business itself — it’s how the case is built and presented.
Most businesses do recover from suspension — including listings that have been denied three or more times. But the window doesn’t stay open indefinitely, and each failed attempt makes the next one harder.
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.