A disapproved ad means zero impressions, zero clicks, and zero leads from that ad until you fix it. If a whole campaign goes red, your spend can collapse overnight while your competitors keep showing.
The good news: most disapprovals come from a short list of causes, and most are fixable in under an hour once you know what Google is actually objecting to. This guide walks through how to find the real reason, fix it properly, request a review, and stop the same problem coming back.
Key Takeaways
- Find the exact reason first. Hover the "Disapproved" status in the Ads tab to see the specific policy, not just the red label.
- Fix the cause, not the symptom. Editing the ad triggers an automatic re-review, but only a real fix gets it approved.
- Landing pages cause more disapprovals than people expect. The destination is part of the ad, so a broken or non-compliant page sinks the whole thing.
- Repeat violations escalate. Repeated policy breaks can lead to account suspension, so fix the pattern, not just one ad.
Step one: find the actual reason
Do not guess. Google tells you why an ad was disapproved, but the answer is one click deeper than the red status badge.
In your Google Ads account, go to the campaign, open the Ads tab, and find the ad marked “Disapproved.” Hover over the word “Disapproved” (or the small icon next to it). A box appears with the specific policy that was violated, for example “Misrepresentation” or “Trademarks in ad text.” That policy name is the single most useful thing on the screen, because the fix depends entirely on which policy was triggered.
If you have many disapproved ads, add the “Policy details” column to your Ads table so you can see every reason at once. Group ads by the same policy and you can often fix dozens in one pass.
The most common reasons (and how to fix each)
Most disapprovals fall into a handful of categories. Here is what they mean in plain language and what actually fixes them.
| Disapproval reason | What it usually means | How to fix it |
|---|---|---|
| Misrepresentation / misleading claims | Promises that look too good, unclear pricing, fake urgency, or claims the page cannot back up | Remove “guaranteed,” “free” when it is not free, and unverifiable numbers. Match ad copy to what the page actually delivers |
| Destination / landing page issues | Page is down, slow, blocked to crawlers, has no clear way back, or content does not match the ad | Make sure the URL loads, works on mobile, matches the ad, and has visible contact and privacy info |
| Trademark in ad text | A brand name you are not authorized to use appears in headlines or descriptions | Remove the trademarked term, or file authorization if you are a reseller with permission |
| Restricted category | Healthcare, finance, gambling, alcohol, and similar areas need certification or extra rules | Apply for the required certification, or adjust copy to stay inside what is allowed without it |
| Prohibited content | Counterfeit goods, dangerous products, or banned claims | Remove the offending product or claim entirely. These rarely have a workaround |
| Editorial / formatting | Excessive capitals, repeated punctuation, gimmicky symbols, spacing tricks | Write the headline as a normal sentence. No “BEST!!!” or “F R E E” spacing |
| Unverified business / domain | Identity or domain ownership not confirmed | Complete advertiser verification and confirm domain ownership in the account |
The two that catch experienced advertisers most often are Misrepresentation and Landing page. Misrepresentation is broad on purpose, so when you see it, look hard at any claim, price, or promise that the page does not clearly support. Landing page disapprovals are sneaky because the ad itself can be perfect: the problem is the destination. A page that loads fine on your desktop can still be flagged if it is slow on mobile, missing a privacy policy, or redirects somewhere unexpected.
How to fix and request a review
Once you know the reason and have a real fix in mind, the process is short.
- Edit the ad or the landing page so it complies. For ad text, change the headline or description directly. For a landing page issue, fix the page itself, since editing the ad will not help if the destination is the problem.
- Save the change. In most cases, editing an ad automatically resubmits it for review. You do not need a separate button.
- If you believe the disapproval is a mistake, use the appeal option. Hover the disapproved status and look for the option to appeal or contact support. Explain clearly why the ad complies.
- Wait for re-review. Most reviews complete within about one business day, though some take longer.
Do not delete and rebuild the ad to “reset” it. You lose the ad’s performance history and learning, and the new ad gets reviewed against the same policy anyway. Edit in place.
How to avoid repeat disapprovals
Fixing one ad is easy. The advertisers who lose sleep are the ones who keep getting flagged because the same root cause lives in their templates, their landing pages, or their ad-building habits.
A few habits prevent most repeat problems:
- Keep claims honest and provable. If the page does not state the price, do not state it in the ad. If you cannot prove “number one,” do not say it.
- Treat the landing page as part of the ad. Before launch, load it on mobile, confirm it is fast, check the privacy policy and contact details are visible, and make sure it matches the promise in the headline. Our landing page CRO checklist doubles as a pre-launch compliance pass.
- Avoid borrowing brand names you are not cleared to use, even in dynamic or automated text.
- Watch responsive search ads and automated assets. Auto-generated combinations can produce copy you never wrote and would never approve.
- Review your account regularly, not just when something breaks. A disapproval is often the visible tip of a wider account-health issue. Our Google Ads audit checklist covers the policy and structural checks worth running monthly, and the wasted spend audit guide shows where silent losses hide even in approved campaigns.
When disapprovals point to a bigger problem
One disapproved ad is a quick fix. A pattern of them, a campaign that keeps tripping the same policy, or an account suspension warning is a signal that the account needs a proper review. Repeated violations can put the whole account at risk, and recovering a suspended account is far harder than preventing one.
If you are spending real money and disapprovals keep eating into your impressions, it is worth getting a second set of eyes on the full account: ad copy, landing pages, structure, and policy exposure together.
Get a free Google Ads audit
If disapprovals keep coming back, or you are not sure why an ad was flagged, we can help. Our free Google Ads audit reviews your ads, landing pages, and account structure to find the policy risks and the wasted spend, and tells you exactly what to fix. From there, our Google Ads management and Google Ads services keep your campaigns compliant and performing, so disapprovals stop being a recurring problem. Book a call and we will walk through your account together.
Sources
- Google Ads Help Center
- Barefoot Performance Marketing direct account experience