Most Google Merchant Center appeal guides tell you what to write and where to click. Almost none explain what happens after you hit Submit. The wait is where merchants make their worst mistakes: resubmitting too early, making last-minute changes that void the appeal, or not preparing for the outcome.
Here is what the 2026 manual review process actually looks like, from the moment you click Request Review to the moment your account is reinstated or denied.
The 2026 review has three phases, not one
Before the April 2026 AI verification update, appeals went straight to a human review queue. Now there is a gating phase.
Hours 0-48: AI triage
Your appeal text and your live store are evaluated together by an automated system. The AI crawls your site in real time, compares what it finds against your appeal statement, and scores the submission. A low score does not trigger an immediate denial, but it moves your appeal to the back of the human queue.
Vague statements like 'we have fixed all issues' score poorly because the AI cannot verify what you fixed against a crawler snapshot. Specific statements with dates, URLs, and actions taken score better.
Days 1-7: Queue
Passing AI triage puts you in the human review queue. In practice, straightforward cases with clean stores and specific appeal text are resolved within 5-7 business days. Complex cases or accounts with a history of repeated appeals take longer.
Days 7-14: Human review
A Google specialist reviews the account. They look at the same signals the AI flagged, plus the overall account history: how long the account has been active, how many prior appeals it has had, and whether the issue appears fully resolved.
What reviewers actually check
The review covers four areas:
- Policy pages: Privacy policy, return policy, shipping policy all need to render, be accessible without login, and contain real content (not placeholder text).
- Contact page: Business name, physical address, and at least one contactable method. A contact form alone no longer passes.
- Product data accuracy: Google crawls 3-5 randomly selected product pages and compares the price, availability, and shipping cost against what the feed reported.
- Checkout flow: The reviewer walks through checkout in an incognito browser. Dead-end steps, JavaScript errors, or price changes at checkout fail this check.
What to do during the wait
The biggest mistake during this period is making changes to the store or feed. Any significant change after submission prompts the review system to re-crawl the site, which can reset the clock on the AI triage phase.
If you find a remaining compliance issue after submitting, do not change the site and wait. Document what you found and what you would fix. If the appeal is denied, you can use that documentation in the next submission during the mandatory waiting period.
Use the time to prepare the next-step documents: a change log with dates and URLs for every fix made, screenshots of all policy pages with timestamps, and a copy of your feed file as it was when you submitted.
The outcome
Reinstatement: you receive an email, products go active within a few hours, and Shopping ads resume delivering. No action needed other than confirming your products are active.
Denial: you receive an email with a general reason but rarely a specific fix instruction. A 7-day mandatory wait begins. Do not resubmit immediately. Use the 7 days to run a deeper audit, since denial means the reviewer found something you did not fix. The free 43-point audit at GMCSuspension.com will catch everything a manual review flags, in about 60 seconds.
Full guide
The complete Google Merchant Center manual review guide covers the full timeline table, the AI triage scoring criteria, the exact fields reviewers check on product pages, and what a strong appeal statement looks like compared to a weak one.
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