Blog / Google Maps & GBP
Why your business isn't showing up on Google Maps
If your business doesn't show up on Google Maps, here are the most common causes and exactly how to fix each one. No jargon, no guesswork.
A customer calls and says, “I tried to find you on Google. You don’t show up.” Or you search your own business name and see nothing. Either way, it’s a problem worth fixing fast.
The good news: most of the reasons a business goes missing from Google Maps are fixable, and they follow a predictable checklist. Work through the causes below in order, because the first few are the most common by far.
1. Your profile isn’t verified
This is the single most common reason. You can create a Google Business Profile in minutes, but creating it and verifying it are two different things. According to Google’s official support documentation, only verified businesses can show their information on Maps and Search.
How to check: Sign in at business.google.com. If you see a “Get verified” button on your profile, you’re not verified yet.
How to fix it: Click that button and follow Google’s prompts. The verification options available to you depend on your business type, location, and other factors Google determines automatically. Current options include:
- Video recording. Google’s preferred method for many businesses right now. You record a short video showing your location and proof you operate the business.
- Postcard by mail. A code is mailed to your business address. Most postcards arrive within 14 days, according to Google. Don’t edit your business name, address, or category while you’re waiting or the code will be invalidated.
- Phone or text. A code sent to your listed business phone number.
- Email. A code sent to your business email address.
You may be offered one option, several, or none of the above. Google determines this automatically. After you complete the steps, Google says verification review takes up to 5 business days, though it sometimes happens faster.
One note: you cannot pick your preferred verification method. Google presents what’s available for your specific profile, and you work with what you’re given.
2. Your profile is suspended
If you had a listing that disappeared, suspension is the first thing to check. Google suspends profiles that violate its guidelines, and it often does so without a detailed explanation.
How to check: Log in to your Google Business Profile. A suspended profile will show a notification directly on the dashboard.
Common reasons Google suspends listings:
- Keyword stuffing in the business name (adding “Plumber” or “Emergency Service” to a name that’s just “John’s Co.”)
- Using a P.O. box or virtual office address as if it were a physical location
- Creating duplicate listings for the same business location
- A recent address change that Google couldn’t verify
- Content on the profile that violates Google’s guidelines
How to fix it: Use Google’s Business Profile appeals tool. Review your profile against Google’s guidelines first, make any necessary corrections, then submit the appeal with supporting documents like a business license, utility bill, or other official paperwork that confirms your business name and address. Google reviews appeals manually and notifies you by email. If the first appeal is denied, you can submit an additional review with more documentation.
3. You have the wrong primary category
Google uses your primary category as a primary signal for what searches your business should appear in. If you’re a concrete contractor listed as “General Contractor,” or an HVAC company listed as “Home Services,” you may be invisible to the specific searches your customers are actually typing.
How to fix it: Go to your profile, click Edit Profile, then Business category. Choose the most specific primary category that describes what your business actually does. You can add up to nine secondary categories to capture related services, but the primary one carries the most weight.
A few things to avoid: don’t add categories just because they’re related to your industry. Only add ones that describe real, visible services you currently offer. Google can filter or suppress listings where the categories don’t match the business activity.
4. Your service-area setup is wrong
This one catches a lot of contractors, plumbers, HVAC companies, and other field-service businesses. There are two types of businesses on Google Maps: storefront businesses (customers come to you) and service-area businesses (you go to customers).
If you’re a service-area business and you’ve left a physical address visible on your profile, Google may hide your listing or show it inconsistently. The correct setup for a service-area business is to hide the physical address and define the geographic area you serve instead.
On the flip side: if you’re a storefront business that removed your address by mistake, Google may not be able to place you on the map at all.
How to fix it: In your Google Business Profile, go to Edit Profile, then Location. If you serve customers at their location and don’t want your address displayed, toggle the address to hidden and add your service area. If you have a physical location customers visit, make sure a valid address is entered and visible.
5. Your business name, address, or phone number is inconsistent across the web
Google cross-references your listing against other mentions of your business online. When your name, address, and phone number (NAP) differ across your website, Yelp, Facebook, industry directories, and other platforms, it creates noise that can hurt your local visibility.
Common inconsistencies:
- “Suite 100” on your website but no suite number on your Google profile
- “St.” on Google but “Street” spelled out on Yelp
- An old phone number still listed on a directory you forgot about
- A former address still showing on your Facebook page
None of these individually will tank your listing, but a pattern of inconsistencies can. Google wants to confirm your business is real and that the information is trustworthy. Inconsistent NAP data makes that harder.
How to fix it: Do a quick search for your business name and city. Look at the top results on Google Maps, Yelp, Facebook, and your own website. Make sure the name, address format, and phone number match exactly. For a more systematic audit, dedicated citation auditing tools can scan hundreds of directories at once.
6. Your profile has thin or missing information
Google’s local ranking algorithm uses three factors: relevance, distance, and prominence. Relevance is how well your profile matches what someone searched. A profile with no description, no hours, no photos, and no website link gives Google very little to work with when deciding whether to show you.
According to Google’s support documentation, businesses with complete and accurate information are more likely to show up in local search results.
What to fill in:
- Business description (describe what you do, who you serve, and where; a few sentences is fine)
- Business hours, including any special hours
- Phone number and website URL
- Photos of your location, your work, or your team
- Services or products, if applicable
This isn’t about gaming the algorithm. It’s about giving Google enough information to understand your business. A nearly empty profile is competing against profiles that are completely filled out, and Google tends to favor the complete ones.
7. You don’t have enough reviews compared to competitors
Google’s “prominence” factor includes reviews. More reviews and higher ratings can help a listing rank better in Maps results for competitive searches. This doesn’t mean you need hundreds of reviews to be visible, but if the businesses outranking you each have substantially more reviews than you do, that gap is part of the story.
Reviews are a correlation factor in local rankings, not a binary switch. A verified, complete profile with zero reviews can still appear in Maps. But in any local search where two or three businesses are competing for the same top spots, reviews often tip the balance.
How to improve it: Ask recent customers to leave a review. The most effective method is a direct link to your Google review form, which you can find in your Google Business Profile under “Get more reviews.” Text or email it to customers shortly after you complete a job. Respond to every review you receive, positive or negative. Google notes that responding to reviews signals that you value customer feedback.
8. You’re outside the searcher’s proximity radius
Google factors in distance when deciding which businesses to show. For any given search query, Google is trying to show businesses that are geographically close to the person searching (or close to the area they specified).
If a potential customer searches “plumber near me” from across town, a competitor with a location closer to them will have a proximity advantage you can’t override directly.
What you can do: For service-area businesses, make sure your service area is defined broadly enough to include the areas you actually serve. For storefront businesses, there’s no shortcut here. Proximity is a real factor. What you can control is making sure your profile is fully optimized so you rank better within your actual radius.
9. You have a duplicate listing
Sometimes a duplicate profile exists for your business, often created years ago by a previous owner, an employee, or Google’s own automated systems. If two profiles compete for the same business, Google may suppress both or give inconsistent results.
How to check: Search your business name on Google Maps. If you see two pins or two listings for the same location, you have a duplicate. You may also see one active profile and one “unclaimed” profile with outdated information.
How to fix it: If the duplicate is unverified, you can claim it and then request to have it merged or removed through Google Business Profile support. If it’s verified under a different Google account, you’ll need to request ownership transfer. Google’s support documentation on duplicate profiles walks through the process.
10. Your profile is too new
A brand-new listing takes time to appear in local results, even after verification. Google’s own documentation states that rankings for new businesses can take up to a month to appear in search results. The verification review itself takes up to 5 business days.
If your listing is less than a few weeks old and you’ve completed verification, this may simply be a matter of waiting while Google indexes your information.
What to do in the meantime: Make your profile as complete as possible. Add photos, fill in every section, write a description. An active, complete profile indexes faster than a bare one.
Where to start if you’re not sure what’s wrong
If you’ve read through this list and aren’t sure which issue applies to you, start here:
- Log in to your Google Business Profile. Look for any alerts: a “Get verified” prompt or a suspension notice. These are the two causes that kill visibility entirely, so rule them out first.
- Search your business name on Google Maps while logged out of your Google account. See exactly what a customer sees.
- Check your primary category. Is it the most specific category that fits your business?
- Confirm your service area or address setup matches your actual business type (service-area vs. storefront).
- Look up your business on Yelp, Facebook, and your website. Compare the name, address, and phone number to what’s in your Google profile.
Most businesses that aren’t showing up have one of the first two issues: unverified or suspended. Fix those first, then work down the list.
If you want a second set of eyes
Working through this solo is doable, but it takes time, and it’s easy to miss something when you’re also running a business.
We offer a free Google Business Profile audit where we look at your current setup, flag what’s holding you back, and tell you what needs to change. No pitch, no obligation. If you want help after that, we can talk about it.
If you’re in the Amarillo area, we work with local businesses directly. We also work with service businesses across the country.
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