Step 1 — Identify policy violations
Google will only remove reviews that violate its content policies. Negative-but-honest feedback isn’t removable, no matter how unfair it feels. Look for: spam, fake accounts, off-topic content, conflict of interest, harassment, hate speech, illegal content, or personal information.
Step 2 — Flag from Google Business Profile
Sign into your Google Business Profile. Find the review, click the three-dot menu, choose “Flag as inappropriate,” and select the violation type that best fits. This routes the review to Google’s automated content-moderation pipeline.
Step 3 — If automated review fails, escalate
Most flagged reviews are auto-rejected within 72 hours by Google’s first-pass moderation. If that happens, you can request a human review through Google’s contact-support form, or — for stronger cases — escalate through Google’s legal removal pathway.
Step 4 — Know when to call specialists
If you have more than a handful of policy-violating reviews, or if the simple flag-and-wait process has already failed, this is where services like ReviewShield earn their fee. We document each case to a higher evidence standard, escalate through legal pathways where appropriate, and resubmit if reviews are reposted.
What doesn’t work
- Asking the reviewer to delete it (rarely works, and signals desperation)
- Replying angrily (locks the review in, attracts attention)
- Buying positive reviews to dilute the negative (violates Google ToS, can get your profile suspended)
- Promising to “boost” your rating with fake reviews (illegal in many jurisdictions, including FTC violations in the US)
The only sustainable path is removing what genuinely violates Google’s policies, and earning the rest.