A fake Google review can tank your rating overnight. Whether it's from a competitor, a disgruntled non-customer, or a bot farm, that one-star review sitting at the top of your profile is costing you real money. The good news: Google does remove fake reviews. The bad news: it's not instant, and the process isn't always straightforward.
This guide walks you through exactly how to identify fake reviews, report them to Google, escalate when needed, and protect your business while you wait for removal.
How to Spot a Fake Google Review
Before you report a review, you need to be sure it's actually fake. Google won't remove a review just because you disagree with it. Legitimate negative reviews — even harsh ones — are protected. Here's how to tell the difference:
Red Flags That Indicate a Fake Review
- No record of the reviewer as a customer — Search your CRM, booking system, and transaction records. If they never did business with you, that's your strongest evidence.
- Generic or vague content — Fake reviews often say things like "terrible service" or "worst experience ever" without any specific details about what happened.
- Reviewer profile has suspicious patterns — Click the reviewer's name. If they've left dozens of 1-star reviews for businesses in different cities on the same day, it's likely a bot or paid reviewer.
- Review mentions services you don't offer — If someone reviews your plumbing company complaining about their haircut, it's obviously meant for a different business (or fabricated entirely).
- Timing correlates with a competitor action — Did you just win a big contract? Open a new location? Sometimes competitors resort to review attacks.
- Reviewer has no other activity — A brand-new Google account with zero photos, no other reviews, and a generic name is a classic fake review signal.
Document everything. Screenshot the review, the reviewer's profile, and any evidence that they were never a customer. You'll need this for your report.
Step-by-Step: How to Remove a Fake Google Review
Step 1: Flag the Review Through Google Business Profile
This is the fastest first step:
- Log into your Google Business Profile
- Navigate to "Reviews" in the left sidebar
- Find the fake review and click the three-dot menu icon
- Select "Flag as inappropriate"
- Choose the reason that best fits: spam, off-topic, conflict of interest, etc.
Google will review the flag, but don't expect immediate action. Most flags take 5-20 business days for a response, and many are initially denied. This is just step one.
Step 2: Report Through the Google Reviews Tool
Google has a dedicated tool for businesses to manage review complaints:
- Visit the Google review management page
- Select your business
- Choose "Report a new review for removal"
- Select the specific review and provide your reasoning
- Submit with supporting evidence
This formal submission carries more weight than a simple flag. Include any evidence that the reviewer was never a customer.
Step 3: Respond Publicly to the Review
While you wait for Google to act, post a professional public response. This serves two purposes: it shows potential customers you're responsive, and it puts your side of the story on record.
Example response to a suspected fake review:
"Thank you for your feedback. We take all reviews seriously. However, we've searched our records and cannot find any transaction or interaction with someone matching your name. If we're mistaken, please contact us directly at [phone/email] so we can address your concern. We want every customer to have a great experience."
This response is polite but clearly signals to anyone reading it that the review may not be legitimate. For more on responding to negative reviews in general, see our guide on how to respond to a 1-star review.
Step 4: Escalate Through Google Business Support
If the initial flag and report don't work, escalate:
- Go to the Google Business Profile Help Center
- Click "Contact Us" or "Get Help"
- Choose "Reviews and photos" as your issue category
- Request a callback or chat with a support agent
- Provide your case number from the initial report, along with all evidence
Speaking with an actual human (or at least a more thorough review process) often yields better results than the automated flag system.
Step 5: Use the Google Business Redressal Form
For persistent fake reviews that survive multiple flags, Google offers a Business Redressal Complaint Form. This is essentially an appeal process for reviews that clearly violate Google's policies but haven't been removed through normal channels.
To access it, search "Google Business Profile redressal form" or ask a Google Business support agent to direct you to it. Include:
- Your business name and profile URL
- The specific review URL
- Evidence the reviewer was never a customer
- Which Google policy the review violates
- Previous case numbers from earlier reports
Step 6: Legal Action (Last Resort)
If a fake review is clearly defamatory and Google won't remove it, you have legal options:
- Cease and desist letter — If you can identify the reviewer, a lawyer's letter sometimes prompts removal
- Court order — Google will remove reviews subject to a valid court order finding them defamatory
- Google's Legal Removal Request — Submit a legal request through Google's legal troubleshooter tool
Legal action is expensive and slow. Reserve it for reviews that are clearly defamatory and causing significant business harm.
What Google's Review Policies Actually Say
Understanding which policies apply helps you frame your removal request. Google prohibits these types of reviews:
| Policy Violation | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Spam and fake content | Reviews that are not based on real experiences | Bot-generated reviews, paid reviews |
| Off-topic | Reviews that don't relate to the business | Political rants, personal attacks unrelated to service |
| Conflict of interest | Reviews from competitors or employees | A competitor leaving a 1-star review |
| Restricted content | Reviews containing illegal content or hate speech | Discriminatory language, threats |
| Impersonation | Reviews pretending to be someone else | Using a fake name to pose as a customer |
When you report a review, explicitly reference the specific policy it violates. This gives Google's moderation team a clear basis for removal.
What to Do While You Wait for Removal
Google review removal can take days, weeks, or sometimes months. In the meantime, you're not helpless:
Dilute the Impact with More Genuine Reviews
One fake 1-star review hurts a lot less when you have 200 genuine 5-star reviews. Double down on your review generation efforts. Send review requests to every recent happy customer. Use automated tools to make this effortless. The reputation management features in Blueprint Growth Suite can send review requests automatically after every completed job or appointment.
Keep Responding to All Reviews
Continue responding to every legitimate review — positive and negative. This keeps your profile active and shows potential customers that you're engaged. Check out our 5-star review response examples for templates that encourage more reviews.
Monitor for Patterns
If you're being targeted by a review attack (multiple fake reviews in a short period), document the pattern. Coordinated attacks are easier to prove and more likely to result in removal. Tools like review management software can alert you to sudden spikes in negative reviews.
How to Prevent Fake Reviews
While you can't completely prevent fake reviews, you can make them less impactful and easier to deal with:
- Build a strong review base — 200+ genuine reviews make one fake review nearly invisible
- Monitor regularly — Catch fake reviews early when they're easier to address
- Maintain detailed customer records — Your CRM should log every interaction so you can quickly verify whether someone was actually a customer
- Don't engage in review wars — Never retaliate by leaving fake reviews on a competitor's profile. It's unethical, against Google's policies, and often backfires
- Use a reputation management platform — Automated monitoring catches fake reviews faster than manual checks
A solid CRM system like the one included in Blueprint Growth Suite gives you instant access to customer records when you need to verify whether a reviewer is legitimate. That data makes your removal requests significantly more convincing.
The Review Attack Playbook: What to Do When You're Targeted
Sometimes fake reviews come in waves. A competitor, a disgruntled ex-employee, or someone with a grudge can coordinate a review attack. Here's your emergency response plan:
- Screenshot everything immediately — Reviews can be edited or deleted by the attacker
- Check reviewer profiles — Look for patterns (same day, similar language, new accounts)
- Report all fake reviews simultaneously — Document the coordinated nature in each report
- Contact Google Business Support directly — Explain it's a coordinated attack, not isolated reviews
- Respond publicly to each review — Use the same professional template noting no customer record
- Activate your review generation system — Push for more genuine reviews to counterbalance
- Consult a lawyer if needed — Coordinated attacks may constitute tortious interference or defamation
Common Mistakes When Dealing with Fake Reviews
Getting emotional in your response. An angry, defensive response makes you look bad — even if the review is clearly fake. Always maintain professional composure.
Flagging legitimate negative reviews as fake. Not every bad review is fake. Some customers genuinely had a poor experience. Flagging legitimate reviews wastes your credibility with Google and makes future reports less effective.
Offering payment or incentives for review removal. Never offer to pay a reviewer to remove their review. This violates Google's policies and can backfire spectacularly if the reviewer screenshots the offer.
Ignoring fake reviews hoping they'll disappear. They won't. Fake reviews stay forever unless reported and removed. The sooner you act, the less damage they do. For broader reputation management strategies, check our guide on reputation management for real estate agents — the principles apply to any industry.
FAQ
How long does it take Google to remove a fake review?
Typically 5-20 business days for a first flag, though some cases take longer. If you escalate through Google Business Support, the process may be faster. Some reviews are never removed despite being clearly fake — which is why building a strong review base is so important.
Can I sue someone for leaving a fake Google review?
Yes, if you can identify the reviewer and the review is provably false and defamatory. However, lawsuits are expensive ($5,000-$50,000+) and time-consuming. Most small businesses are better served by focusing on review generation and report-based removal.
What if Google denies my removal request?
Appeal through the Business Redressal Form or escalate via phone/chat support. Provide additional evidence if available. If all else fails, your best strategy is to bury the fake review under a volume of genuine positive reviews.
Can competitors leave fake reviews?
They can and they do. Competitor-generated reviews violate Google's "conflict of interest" policy. If you can prove a reviewer is connected to a competitor (same IP, employee of competing business, etc.), include that evidence in your report.
Should I respond to a fake review?
Yes, always. A professional response noting that you can't find the reviewer in your records signals to potential customers that the review may not be legitimate. It also demonstrates that you're attentive and professional.
Protect Your Online Reputation
Blueprint Growth Suite monitors your reviews in real time, alerts you to new feedback instantly, and helps you generate a steady stream of genuine reviews to outweigh any fake ones.