Most merchants who get suspended go straight to the misrepresentation guides. But there is a separate Google Merchant Center policy that catches a lot of stores doing nothing they would call dishonest: unacceptable business practices. It covers how you price, promote, and handle customer data, not whether your product is what it claims to be. Here is what actually trips it, and why the 2026 AI verification made it easier to hit.
How it differs from misrepresentation
Misrepresentation is about identity and trust: who runs the store, whether the business is reachable, whether the product matches the listing. Unacceptable business practices is about conduct. You can pass every misrepresentation check and still get flagged here because of a countdown timer that never ends or a shipping fee that only appears at checkout. Same suspension screen, different root cause, and the appeal has to name the right one.
The practices Google flags
1. Fake urgency and bait pricing. A "sale ends in 2 hours" banner that resets on every page load, a strikethrough "was" price the product never actually sold at, or a discount that is permanent. The AI crawler now visits often enough to notice the timer never expires.
2. Hidden or surprise fees. A price in your feed that balloons at checkout because of mandatory "handling" or "insurance" charges. Google compares the feed price, the page price, and the checkout total. If they diverge, that is the violation.
3. Coercing personal data. Forcing account creation or demanding more information than a purchase needs before a visitor can see pricing or check out.
4. Phantom inventory and pre-order games. Listing items as in stock that ship in six weeks, or running endless "pre-orders" with no real fulfilment date.
5. Misusing promotions. Coupon codes that do not work, free-gift offers with undisclosed conditions, or loyalty terms that change after purchase.
Why 2026 changed the math
Since April 2026, Google verifies stores with an automated AI crawler that runs continuously instead of only when you appeal. A countdown timer that resets, a checkout fee that appears late, or a price that does not match the feed used to need a human reviewer to catch. Now the crawler measures these patterns across your whole catalog on every pass. A practice you have run for a year can get flagged the week the crawler reaches that pattern.
Before you appeal
Fix the conduct on the live site first, because the crawler re-checks it. Make every countdown real or remove it, show the full price including fees before checkout, drop forced account creation, and align your feed price with the page and the checkout total. Then appeal once, naming the specific practice you corrected.
The full breakdown, with the checklist and the FAQ, is here: GMC Unacceptable Business Practices: 2026 Fix Guide. If you would rather see which practices still fire on your store before you appeal, the GMCSuspension audit is a free, self-serve scan of 43+ policy checks in about 60 seconds. No signup, instant results.
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