Frequently Asked Question
Google can stop campaigns when the system detects billing concerns, policy issues, website trust problems, or unusual account activity. In many cases, businesses receive a suspension notice after automated reviews identify potential risks connected to the account or landing pages.
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The safest recovery approach starts with identifying the real reason behind the suspension before making major account changes. A proper review of billing details, landing pages, website quality, and policy compliance usually improves recovery chances more effectively than repeated appeal submissions.
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Yes. Google reviews landing page quality, website transparency, business information, and overall user experience before allowing campaigns to continue running. Weak website structure, misleading claims, or unclear business details can increase suspension risks.
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Repeated appeals often fail when the original trust or compliance issue still exists inside the account. Google checks advertiser behavior, website quality, billing consistency, and policy compliance during the review process.
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Creating a new account immediately after suspension can create additional trust problems because Google may connect the new account with previous account activity. A structured recovery process is usually a safer option for long-term account stability.
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Policy-related suspensions usually happen because of unsupported claims, misleading landing pages, weak business transparency, or restricted advertising practices. Competitive industries often face stricter automated reviews and compliance checks.