How can I resolve a "Website needs improvement" suspension in Merchant Center?
Quick Answer
Improve your website by adding clear policies, contact information, secure checkout, and ensuring fast loading times.
What This Warning Actually Means
When Google flags your website as "needing improvement," it has detected issues that undermine the shopping experience. This is a warning stage - your products may still show, but you are on borrowed time.
Warning vs. Suspension Timeline
You typically have 7-28 days to address issues after receiving this warning. If problems are not resolved, the warning escalates to a full account suspension. The countdown starts when Google detects the issues, not when you first notice the warning.
Categories of Website Issues
Google groups "website needs improvement" problems into several categories:
Incomplete Website
Placeholder content, missing pages, "coming soon" sections, or template text that was never replaced
Poor User Experience
Broken links, confusing navigation, slow loading, or a checkout process that does not work properly
Missing Information
No contact details, incomplete product descriptions, or lack of required policy pages
Data Inconsistency
Product information in your feed does not match what appears on your website
Fixing an Incomplete Website
An "incomplete" website does not necessarily mean your site is half-built. Even established stores get flagged for having remnants of incomplete content.
Common Signs of Incompleteness
Lorem Ipsum or placeholder text
Any "Lorem ipsum" text anywhere on your site - including hidden sections, footer areas, or inactive pages - will trigger this warning
Default template images
Stock photos that came with your theme, especially generic business images or placeholder product shots
"Coming Soon" or "Under Construction" pages
Any page that indicates the site is not fully ready, even if it is just one section of one page
Empty categories or collections
Category pages with zero products, or product listings that say "No products found"
How to Find Hidden Placeholder Content
- Use your browser's search function (Ctrl+F or Cmd+F) on every page to search for "lorem", "ipsum", "placeholder", "sample", "coming soon"
- Check your footer thoroughly - template footers often contain placeholder links
- Review product descriptions for any that say "Description coming soon" or similar
- Look at blog posts or news sections - often these have sample content
- Check 404 error pages and other system pages
Finding and Fixing Broken Links
Broken links are one of the most common triggers for website improvement warnings. Google crawls your site regularly and notes every dead end.
Types of Broken Links to Check
How to Audit Your Links
Use multiple tools to check for broken links - a single tool often misses issues. Free options include Screaming Frog (limited to 500 URLs), Google Search Console's coverage report, and online broken link checkers. Run at least two different tools to be thorough.
Common Broken Link Locations
- Navigation menus - Especially dropdown menus with links to discontinued categories
- Footer links - Policy pages, social media links, partner links
- Product pages - Related products that have been deleted
- Blog posts - Internal links to old pages or external resources
- Sitemap - URLs in your sitemap that return 404s
Required Business Information
Google requires certain information to be clearly visible on your website. Missing any of these can trigger the improvement warning.
Mandatory Elements
Contact Information
A working phone number and email address. These must be easily findable - not buried in a PDF or hidden behind multiple clicks. Best practice is a dedicated "Contact Us" page linked from your main navigation.
Physical Address
A real business address (not just a P.O. Box for most business types). This should match what you have listed in Merchant Center.
Return and Refund Policy
Clear explanation of how customers can return products and under what conditions they will receive refunds. Must be specific to your business, not generic template text.
Shipping Information
Details on shipping methods, costs, and estimated delivery times. Must be accurate and match what you submit in your product feed.
Privacy Policy
Explanation of how you collect and use customer data. Required in most jurisdictions and by Google.
Terms of Service
The legal terms governing purchases on your site.
Policy Page Consistency
Google checks that your policies are relevant to your actual business. If you sell electronics but your return policy mentions "perishable goods" or "swimwear," this inconsistency can trigger warnings. Review policies to ensure they match your product categories.
Product Data Matching Issues
Your product feed data must exactly match what appears on your website. Discrepancies between the two are a major cause of website improvement warnings.
Critical Matching Points
Prices
Feed price must match landing page price exactly. Include or exclude tax consistently.
Availability
Do not advertise products as "in stock" if your page shows "out of stock" or "preorder"
Product Titles
Feed titles should match or closely relate to what the product page shows
Images
Main image in feed should be clearly visible on the product page
URLs
Links must go directly to the correct product page, not category pages or homepages
Currency
Price currency in feed must match what displays on your website
Common Sync Problems
- Stale feed data - Feed was uploaded days ago and prices have changed since
- Currency conversion errors - Feed shows USD but site displays in EUR
- Dynamic pricing - Prices change based on user location but feed has static prices
- Sale prices - Sale ended on website but feed still shows promotional price
- Variant issues - Feed links to main product but price is for a specific variant
Checkout and Purchase Flow
Google tests your checkout process. If customers cannot actually complete a purchase, your website will be flagged.
Checkout Requirements
Test Your Checkout
Perform a test purchase yourself - go through the entire flow from product page to order confirmation. Watch for:
- Pages that fail to load or time out
- Forms that do not submit properly
- Payment gateways that show errors
- Shipping options that do not appear for certain addresses
- Price changes between cart and final checkout
Multi-Location Testing
If you target multiple countries, test the checkout from different locations. Use VPNs or services that simulate different geolocations. A checkout that works from the US may fail for users in Europe due to payment processor restrictions or shipping limitations.
Website Performance Issues
Slow websites and technical problems affect user experience and can contribute to website improvement warnings.
Performance Factors
Page Load Speed
Slow pages frustrate users and Google. Aim for under 3 seconds load time. Compress images, enable caching, minimize JavaScript.
Mobile Responsiveness
Your site must work properly on mobile devices. Test on actual phones, not just browser simulators.
Server Reliability
Frequent downtime or server errors (500 errors) will hurt your standing. Monitor uptime.
SSL Certificate
Must have a valid, properly configured SSL certificate. Expired or misconfigured SSL will cause problems.
Quick Performance Wins
- Convert images to WebP format (smaller file size, same quality)
- Enable browser caching through your hosting provider
- Use a content delivery network (CDN) if you have international customers
- Minimize third-party scripts that slow down page loads
- Implement lazy loading for images below the fold
Requesting a Review After Fixes
Once you have addressed all issues, you need to request a review from Google. Here is how to do it effectively.
Document everything you fixed
Create a list of all changes made. Take screenshots as evidence. This helps in case of appeal.
Go to Merchant Center diagnostics
Navigate to the issues section in your Merchant Center account and find the specific warning.
Request review
Click the "Request Review" button. Add a brief description of changes if given the option.
Wait for the review
Reviews typically take 3-7 business days. Do not request multiple reviews - this can delay the process.
Before You Request Review
Make sure ALL issues are fixed before requesting review. A failed review makes subsequent reviews harder and can accelerate the path to suspension. One thorough fix is better than multiple partial attempts.
Automated Compliance Checking
Our scanner checks all the elements Google looks for, identifying issues before you request review - so you do not waste review attempts on fixable problems.
Run Compliance ScanPreventing Future Website Issues
After resolving the warning, implement processes to prevent it from recurring.
Ongoing Maintenance Tasks
Weekly
- • Check Merchant Center "Needs Attention" tab
- • Verify feed data matches website
- • Review any new warnings or errors
Monthly
- • Run broken link checker on full site
- • Test checkout process end-to-end
- • Check site speed and performance
Quarterly
- • Review all policy pages for accuracy
- • Verify contact information is current
- • Check SSL certificate expiration
After Any Site Changes
- • Test affected pages and links
- • Verify feed still syncs correctly
- • Check mobile functionality
Set up monitoring alerts for downtime and performance issues. Many hosting providers offer basic monitoring, or use free tools to check your site regularly. Catching problems before Google does is always better than recovering from a suspension.