A suspended Google Ads account stops your lead flow instantly, and the panic that follows usually makes it worse. The good news: most suspensions are recoverable if you handle them calmly and correctly. The bad news: the most common "fix" people reach for, opening a new account, is the one move that can make it permanent.
Here's what actually causes suspensions, how to appeal in a way that works, and how to make sure it doesn't happen again.
First: read the actual notice
Google names the specific policy in two places, the suspension email and a banner inside the account. Do not guess. The appeal you file has to address the exact policy cited, and the categories are very different problems:
- Suspicious payment activity: something about your payment method or billing pattern tripped a fraud signal.
- Circumventing systems: Google believes the account (or its owner) is working around a past enforcement, often linked by payment profile, domain, or device.
- Unpaid balance: the simplest: a failed payment. Usually resolved by settling the balance.
- Policy violation: misrepresentation, malware, or unapproved restricted content (pharma, gambling, financial services, etc.).
The most common causes, in order
- Payment and billing signals. New accounts that suddenly spend aggressively, mismatched billing details, or a card flagged elsewhere. The fastest-growing suspension category for new advertisers.
- Circumventing systems. Frequently catches people who previously had an account suspended and started fresh without resolving it. Google links accounts; a clean-looking new account inherits the old problem.
- Misrepresentation. Unclear business identity, missing contact information, "too good to be true" claims, or a landing page that doesn't match the ad's promise.
- Restricted content without certification. Healthcare, addiction services, financial services, and similar verticals require verification or LegitScript-style certification. Running first and certifying later is a common, avoidable trigger.
- Unpaid balance. Mundane, and the easiest to fix.
How to appeal so it actually works
- Complete business and advertiser identity verification if you haven't. Many suspensions won't lift until Google has confirmed who you are.
- Fix the underlying issue first, then appeal. Appealing before you've changed anything wastes your one clean shot.
- File one thorough appeal. Use the form linked from the suspension notice. State the policy, what you changed, and why you're now compliant. Attach requested documentation.
- Do not submit repeat appeals. Multiple submissions can push you back in the queue rather than forward.
- If denied, read the denial closely. It often cites a different policy than your first appeal addressed. Fix that one and re-appeal.
Most first reviews come back within one to three business days. Payment and circumventing-systems cases take longer because they need manual investigation.
The one mistake that makes it permanent
Do not open a new account to get back online. "Circumventing systems" is itself a suspendable offense, and Google links accounts by payment profile, domain, device, and more. A new account will usually be suspended too, and it can poison the appeal on your original account. However tempting it is to just start fresh and keep the leads coming, the only durable path is reinstating the original account.
How to avoid the next one
The cheapest suspension is the one you never get. Verify your business identity before you scale, keep billing details clean and consistent, audit ad copy and landing pages against Google's policies before launch, and secure the right certifications for restricted categories up front. In regulated verticals especially, policy is a launch prerequisite, not a cleanup task. Our Google Ads audit checklist includes the policy-exposure review we run before any account goes live.
If your account is suspended and the appeal isn't moving, a senior strategist who has navigated reinstatements can often spot the real trigger faster. Book a free audit and we'll review your account and the suspension notice with you.