Google's Review Crackdown: Stop Asking for Reviews at Checkout
Google is deleting reviews and restricting hearing clinic profiles for front-desk review requests. Learn the warning signs and how to stay compliant.

A hearing clinic owner woke up to 800 missing reviews. One day she had 1,200 five-star ratings. The next morning? 400.
Then came the official notice. Google restricted her Business Profile for 30 days. No new reviews allowed. A warning banner now tells potential patients that “suspicious reviews were removed.”
Her mistake? Asking patients for reviews while they checked out at the front desk.
Google considers this pressure. And they’re actively enforcing their policies against it. Reports from Google Product Experts suggest this pattern is becoming increasingly common across healthcare-adjacent service businesses.
What’s Actually Happening to Hearing Clinic Profiles
Google Product Experts are reporting a wave of enforcement actions. Hearing clinics are losing hundreds of reviews overnight. Business Profiles are being restricted. Warning banners are appearing on affected listings.
This enforcement comes after regulatory pressure. The UK’s Competition and Markets Authority forced Google’s hand. The FTC introduced new rules in the US. Now Google has to prove they’re serious about fake engagement.
The 30-Day Restriction
When Google catches you, they don’t just delete reviews. They freeze your entire review system for 30 days minimum.
During this period, no patient can leave a review. Your profile displays a warning banner. Your average rating drops because you lost reviews.
New patients see that warning. They wonder what happened. Some choose a competitor instead.
The Warning Banner That Kills Trust
That banner is brutal. It tells everyone that Google removed suspicious reviews from your business.
Potential patients don’t know the details. They just see “suspicious” and “removed.” That’s enough to create doubt — especially for someone already nervous about choosing a provider for their hearing health.
You can’t remove the banner. You can’t explain what happened. You just wait 30 days and hope your reputation recovers.
Why Checkout Review Requests Cross the Line
Google’s Fake Engagement Policy is clear. You cannot pressure patients to leave reviews. You cannot incentivize them. You cannot ask at the point of service.
The front desk is the point of service. That’s where payment or copays change hands. That’s where the power dynamic is clearest.
The Pressure Problem
Think about the psychology. Your patient just finished their appointment. They’re standing at the front desk handling payment or scheduling a follow-up.
The front desk staff or provider asks for a review right then. What’s your patient supposed to say? “No, I don’t want to help your practice”?
Most people feel obligated. Some feel uncomfortable. But they pull out their phone and leave a review because saying no feels awkward.
That’s not genuine feedback. That’s coercion. Google knows the difference.
What Google’s Policy Actually Bans
The Fake Engagement Policy prohibits three specific actions. Don’t offer incentives like discounts or freebies for reviews. Don’t discourage negative feedback or only ask for positives. Don’t pressure people at the moment of transaction.
Asking at checkout violates the third rule. It doesn’t matter if you’re nice about it. It doesn’t matter if you don’t offer anything in return.
The location and timing create pressure. That’s enough for Google to take action.
How Google Actually Detects This Practice
While Google relies on manual reports from consumers, it also uses algorithmic detection. Their systems look for patterns that indicate policy violations.
Two signals are particularly powerful. Review timestamps and Business Profile traffic data. When these correlate suspiciously, Google investigates.
The Time Correlation Signal
Your Business Profile shows when your hearing clinic is busiest. Google tracks foot traffic patterns for every location.
They also know exactly when reviews are posted. If your review timestamps consistently match your busiest hours, that’s a red flag.
Think about it. Real reviews don’t happen during the appointment. Patients leave reviews later—that evening, the next day, sometimes a week after they’ve had time to notice the difference.
But reviews solicited at checkout? They happen immediately. Right during business hours. Right when the clinic is packed.
The Pattern Recognition Algorithm
Google’s AI looks for unnatural patterns. A hearing clinic with consistent review volume suddenly sees a spike. Reviews cluster at specific times. Multiple reviews appear within minutes of each other.
These patterns scream “solicited at checkout.” The algorithm flags your profile. A human reviewer confirms. Then the penalties begin.
The sophistication is impressive. Google can detect which businesses ask at checkout versus which use proper post-visit follow-up.
The Right Way to Generate Hearing Clinic Reviews
You can and should ask for reviews. You just can’t do it at the wrong time in the wrong place.
The solution is simple. Wait until after they leave. Send a follow-up message. Make the review process effortless. (For a complete system that can help you get 100 Google reviews in 90 days, see our detailed guide.)
Wait Until After They Leave
Give your patient space. Let them get home. Let them notice how much clearer conversations sound with a new hearing aid, or how much of a relief a proper diagnosis was. Let them get feedback from family.
That’s when they’re genuinely appreciative. That’s when their review reflects real experience. That’s what Google wants to see.
Send a text or email a day or two after their appointment — or, for a hearing aid trial, once they’ve had a few days to adjust. This timing feels natural. It’s enough space to avoid pressure, but soon enough that the experience is fresh.
Make It Effortless, Not Pushy
Your follow-up should do two things. Thank them for their visit. Provide a direct review link.
That’s it. No more than 2 requests. No guilt trips. No explanations of why reviews matter.
The message should feel like a friendly thank you. The review link should go directly to your Google Business Profile. One click and they’re there.
And definitely no review gating.
Review gating is when you screen patients before asking for reviews. You send the review link only to happy patients. Unhappy patients get sent to a private feedback form instead.
Some services do this automatically. They ask “How was your experience?” with a thumbs up/thumbs down. If the patient chooses thumbs up, they get the Google review link. Thumbs down? They’re redirected to a complaint form.
Google explicitly bans this practice. They call it “discouraged or prohibited content” in their Fake Engagement Policy. The reason is simple—it artificially inflates your rating by filtering out negative feedback.
Send every patient the same review link. Don’t pre-screen. Don’t filter. Let them choose what to say.
If someone had a bad experience, you want to know about it publicly. That’s how you improve. That’s how you build real trust. And that’s what keeps your Business Profile in good standing with Google.
A Simple Text That Works
Here’s the kind of message one Perfectly5.5 client used to grow from 154 to 988 reviews. “Thanks for visiting today! We’re glad we could help. If you have a moment, we’d appreciate your feedback: [direct review link]”
Notice what’s missing. No pressure. No request for five stars. No explanation of how reviews help. Just gratitude and an easy path to leave feedback.
This simple approach generated 834 new reviews in 24 months. Zero penalties. Zero deleted reviews. Just genuine patient feedback.
What This Means for Your Practice
This crackdown isn’t temporary. Google has regulatory pressure to maintain review integrity. They’re going to keep detecting and punishing pressure-based solicitation.
If you’re currently asking at checkout, stop immediately. Switch to post-visit follow-up today. The risk isn’t worth it.
The Trust Factor
Reviews only work if patients trust them. When Google removes 800 reviews and adds a warning banner, that trust evaporates.
You can’t rebuild trust quickly. Those deleted reviews are gone forever. The warning banner stays for 30 days minimum.
New patients don’t care why it happened. They just see suspicious activity and choose someone else. Your ranking drops. Your new-patient rate falls. Revenue suffers.
Building Review Volume the Right Way
One Perfectly5.5 client proves the right approach works better anyway. They generated 988 reviews with zero policy violations using a systematic approach to review generation. Their profile ranks #1 for 88% of local searches.
Their secret? A systematic post-visit text sent within a day or two of every appointment. The message was friendly and brief. The review link was direct.
Result? 541% review growth over 24 months. $70K+ in attributed revenue. 1,000%+ ROI. And zero penalties from Google.
That’s the power of doing it right. Patient, systematic, pressure-free review generation that Google rewards instead of punishes.
Take Action Before Google Finds You
If you’re asking at checkout, change your process this week. Set up automated follow-up texts or emails. Train your team to stop soliciting reviews in person.
The penalties are real. The enforcement is accelerating. And the damage to your practice can take months to repair.
Want to see how a Perfectly5.5 client built their review system without violating any policies? We can walk you through their entire process—from the text messages they send to the timing that maximizes response rates.
Reach out, and we’ll walk you through what actually works.