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Fake reviews are an unfortunate reality for home inspectors. A competitor trying to undermine your business, a real estate agent upset that you killed a deal by calling a safety hazard, or even a vindictive former employee — any of these can leave a review that misrepresents your services or describes an inspection you never performed. Unlike genuine negative reviews, fake reviews require a different strategy: swift identification, documentation, and formal removal requests.

How to Tell If a Review Is Fake

Not every negative review is fake, and not every fake review is obvious. Here are the red flags to watch for:

  • The reviewer has no other activity: A brand-new Google account with no other reviews, a generic username, and no profile picture is a common indicator of a fake review.
  • The review describes an inspection you never performed: Check your records. If the address, date, or service described doesn’t match any job you completed, it’s likely fraudulent.
  • The review is suspiciously generic: “Bad service, would not recommend” without any specific detail about the inspection is a warning sign.
  • A cluster of negative reviews in a short period: A sudden spike of negative reviews — especially from accounts with no prior history — can indicate a coordinated attack.
  • The reviewer’s location doesn’t match your service area: If someone in another state leaves you a one-star review, question the legitimacy.

How to Report a Fake Review to Google

Google makes the review reporting process straightforward. On your Business Profile, find the review in question and click the three-dot menu. Select “Flag as inappropriate” and follow the prompts. For fake reviews specifically, choose the option that indicates the review is fake or describes a business the reviewer didn’t actually use.

After flagging, Google may or may not remove the review. If they decline, you can escalate by filing a formal content policy violation report through Google’s Business Redressal form. Document every step of the process — screenshots, dates, correspondence — in case you need to reference it later.

Reporting Fake Reviews on Other Platforms

Google isn’t the only place fake reviews can appear. Yelp, Angie’s List, the Better Business Bureau, and even Zillow all have review sections for home inspectors. Each platform has its own removal process. Familiarize yourself with each platform’s flagging mechanism before you need it. Generally, you’ll need to demonstrate that the review violates the platform’s terms of service — often because it describes a non-customer experience or contains fraudulent content.

Building a Review Profile That Absorbs Fake Reviews

The most effective defense against fake reviews is a strong overall review profile. A business with 50 legitimate five-star reviews and one obvious fake review will survive the fake review intact. A business with five reviews and one fake one has a much more fragile foundation. Building a robust, ongoing review generation strategy is your best long-term protection against the occasional fraudulent attack.

Ready to protect and grow your home inspection reputation? RepHaven helps inspectors monitor, manage, and market their online presence — starting at just $299/month.

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Related: Understand the broader landscape with our guide on responding to negative reviews and learn how to build your Google review profile to insulate yourself against future attacks.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I sue someone for leaving a fake review about my home inspection business?
In some jurisdictions, defamatory fake reviews can form the basis of a civil lawsuit, particularly if you can identify the reviewer and demonstrate financial harm. Consult an attorney specializing in defamation or business law in your state to evaluate your options. In most cases, platform removal requests and a strong overall reputation strategy are faster and more practical first steps.
How do I prove a review is fake when Google won’t remove it?
Document everything: your service records showing no engagement with that client, IP address analysis if possible, the reviewer’s profile history, and any evidence of coordinated activity. Submit this documentation through Google’s formal redressal process. If the review persists, focus on generating more genuine positive reviews to offset it in your overall rating.
What should I do if a real estate agent leaves a fake review to retaliate for a deal that fell through?
Document the context privately, flag the review as fraudulent if it describes a service you didn’t provide or misrepresents your conduct, and report it to the platform. If the agent is a known referral source, consider reaching out privately to address any underlying business dispute — professional relationships sometimes benefit from a direct conversation separate from any public review issue.
Will responding to a fake review make it more visible?
In most cases, a response does not boost the review’s visibility. However, a public response that is defensive or aggressive can reflect poorly on you. Keep any response brief, professional, and factual — simply noting that the described experience doesn’t match your records, without escalating the conflict, is generally the best approach.
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