Few things are more maddening than submitting verification, getting rejected, fixing what you think was wrong, and getting rejected again. If you're stuck in that loop, the cause is usually one of a short list of specific problems — and Google often tells you which, if you know where to look. Here's how to find the real reason and fix it, instead of guessing your way through attempt after attempt.
Google frequently rejects a verification without sending a clear notification. The place to look is your profile in the Google Maps app: open it and check for a "review issues" or warning message. That warning usually states the specific reason your attempt failed — which turns blind guessing into a targeted fix. Always check there before trying again.
The fastest way to burn through attempts is to keep re-submitting without knowing what went wrong. Find the stated reason first, fix that exact thing, and only then try again. One informed attempt is worth five blind ones.
For video verification, the top cause is simply not capturing the required proof — clear permanent signage with your business name, the surroundings that match your address, and evidence you can access the business. Vague, too-short, or edited videos get rejected. Our video verification guide covers exactly what to film.
If the address on your profile doesn't line up with map imagery or with your listings elsewhere online, verification stalls. Inconsistent name, address, and phone details across the web are a major red flag.
PO boxes, virtual offices, and mailbox stores aren't allowed for verification. If your listed address is one of these, no number of attempts will succeed until you use a qualifying address or set up as a service-area business correctly.
More than one profile for the same business confuses Google and can cause rejections. Tracking down and resolving duplicates often clears the path.
Frequent edits to your name, address, or other core details make Google suspicious and can trigger rejection. Lock your information down and stop editing.
Choosing a business type that conflicts with your address setup, or an unnoticed policy issue, can block verification — and in some cases tip over into a suspension.
Editing your profile while a verification is being reviewed frequently resets the whole process — so you wait again, only to potentially fail for the same underlying reason. Make your fixes, submit once, and then leave the profile untouched until you hear back.
If you've identified and fixed the stated issue and still can't get verified after a couple of genuine attempts, request a manual review through Google Business Profile support. A human reviewer can often approve a legitimate business that the automated system keeps bouncing. Be ready to demonstrate you're real and operating where you claim.
The same issues that cause verification to fail — address problems, prohibited setups, frequent edits — are the ones that get profiles suspended. If yours crosses that line, the path is similar: fix the root cause and appeal. See how to get a suspended profile reinstated.
Getting verified is just the entry ticket — the real work is being visible and staying ahead of competitors once you're live. RivalMappd tracks whether you're actually showing up and how you compare to the businesses around you, every month. See the plans and get your first competitor report.
RivalMappd tracks your local presence and your competitors' rankings and reviews every month, so being verified turns into being found — and staying ahead. Click through to see how it works.
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