Why won't Google tell me exactly why my Google Ads account was suspended?
Quick Answer
Google limits specific details to prevent bad actors from learning how to circumvent their detection systems.
Why Google Limits Details
Google's vague suspension notices are a deliberate security measure, not incompetence or laziness.
Preventing Gaming the System
If Google explained exactly how they detected a violation, bad actors would use that information to:
- Identify detection thresholds and stay just below them
- Understand which signals trigger reviews
- Create workarounds for specific detection methods
- Share exploit techniques with other bad actors
The Security Tradeoff
Google must balance helping legitimate advertisers with not creating a roadmap for scammers. Unfortunately, this means legitimate businesses caught in the system receive the same limited information as actual violators.
What Google Does Tell You
While specifics are limited, Google does provide some information:
Policy Category
You will typically learn which general policy was violated:
- Circumventing Systems
- Unacceptable Business Practices
- Misrepresentation
- Suspicious Payments
- Repeated Policy Violations
Where to Find Information
- Account notification banner - Alert at the top of your Google Ads dashboard
- Email notification - Sent to your account email address
- Policy page link - Usually included in the notification
- Ad disapproval history - If suspension followed ad issues
Use the policy name as your starting point. Read the full policy page carefully - it often reveals what Google is looking for.
How to Identify the Issue Yourself
Since Google will not tell you exactly what went wrong, you need to investigate:
Review Your Recent Activity
- New ads or campaigns launched recently
- Changes to existing ads
- Landing page modifications
- Payment method changes
- Account settings adjustments
Check Your Ad Disapproval History
Account suspensions often follow patterns of ad disapprovals. Look for:
- Repeated disapprovals for the same reason
- Multiple ads with similar violations
- Recent disapprovals that you ignored
Audit Your Website
Many suspensions are triggered by landing page issues:
- Missing or incomplete policy pages
- Unclear business information
- Claims that could be seen as misleading
- Technical issues (broken links, slow loading, security)
Review the Full Policy
The policy Google cited - read the entire page, not just the summary. Often the specific subsection that applies to you becomes clear.
Common Patterns by Suspension Type
Based on the policy category, here are typical triggers:
Circumventing Systems
Usually: Multiple accounts, cloaking, creating new account after previous suspension, hiding content from Google
Unacceptable Business Practices
Usually: Business model concerns, hidden terms, impossible promises, association with known bad actors
Misrepresentation
Usually: Unclear business identity, misleading claims, discrepancy between ads and website, phishing-like behavior
Suspicious Payments
Usually: Card issues, mismatched billing info, shared payment methods, chargebacks
What Not to Do
Frustration with vague notifications leads advertisers to make these mistakes:
Demanding Specific Details
Repeatedly contacting support demanding exact violation details will not work. They cannot provide information that would compromise their security systems.
Guessing Randomly
Making random changes hoping to fix something wastes time. Use the policy category to guide your investigation.
Appealing Without Fixing Anything
Submitting appeals that say "I do not know what I did wrong" are almost always denied. You need to identify and fix issues first.
Creating New Accounts
Bypassing the suspension by creating a new account adds a circumvention violation on top of whatever the original issue was.
The Effective Approach
Instead of fighting the information gap, work with what you have:
Step 1: Comprehensive Audit
Assume everything might be a problem and audit your entire presence:
- All active and paused ads
- All landing pages being advertised
- Your entire website (not just landing pages)
- Business information and policies
- Payment and billing setup
Step 2: Fix Everything Suspicious
If something could possibly be interpreted as violating the cited policy, fix it - even if you are not sure it caused the suspension.
Step 3: Document Your Changes
Keep records of what you changed and when. This becomes your evidence for the appeal.
Step 4: Appeal with Specifics
Even though Google did not tell you the specific issue, your appeal should be specific about what you fixed and how.
How to Address Uncertainty in Your Appeal
Your appeal should acknowledge the situation while demonstrating comprehensive action:
"I received a suspension notice citing [policy name]. While the specific trigger was not detailed, I have conducted a comprehensive review of my account and website to address any potential compliance issues.
I have made the following changes:
1. [Specific change with URL or detail]
2. [Specific change with URL or detail]
3. [Specific change with URL or detail]
I believe these changes address the [policy name] requirements and am committed to maintaining full compliance."
This approach shows Google that you take compliance seriously and have made genuine efforts to fix issues, even without specific guidance.
When Google Support Can Help
While support cannot reveal detection methods, they can sometimes help in limited ways:
What Support CAN Do
- Confirm which policy category applies
- Point you to relevant policy pages
- Clarify policy requirements in general terms
- Confirm whether your appeal was received
What Support CANNOT Do
- Tell you the specific ad, page, or behavior that triggered suspension
- Explain how their detection systems work
- Guarantee what changes will result in reinstatement
- Expedite your appeal review
Find Issues Yourself
Since Google will not tell you what is wrong, use our scanner to identify potential compliance issues on your website. Finding and fixing problems proactively improves your appeal chances.
Scan for Issues