What does Google say about SEO? /
Quick SEO Quiz

Test your SEO knowledge in 3 questions

Less than 30 seconds. Find out how much you really know about Google search.

🕒 ~30s 🎯 3 questions 📚 SEO Google

Official statement

Only businesses with a physical presence, such as a physical store or a service area they cover, can create a Google Business Profile. Purely online businesses are not currently eligible for a professional profile.
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

💬 EN 📅 28/07/2022 ✂ 15 statements
Watch on YouTube →
Other statements from this video 14
  1. Google réécrit-il vraiment vos balises title à sa guise ?
  2. Faut-il vraiment bannir les prix et stocks des balises title ?
  3. Comment vérifier efficacement l'affichage réel de vos title links dans les SERP Google ?
  4. Pourquoi Google impose-t-il un seuil de 1200 pixels pour les images produits ?
  5. Faut-il vraiment utiliser la balise Max Image Preview pour contrôler l'affichage de vos images dans Google ?
  6. Les données structurées sont-elles vraiment indispensables pour éviter de passer à côté des rich snippets ?
  7. Pourquoi Google insiste-t-il sur 6 champs minimaux dans les données structurées produits ?
  8. Pourquoi vos rich snippets n'apparaissent-ils pas malgré un balisage Schema.org en place ?
  9. Faut-il vraiment combiner données structurées et flux Merchant Center pour le SEO produit ?
  10. Comment Google calcule-t-il réellement les baisses de prix affichées dans les résultats enrichis ?
  11. Pourquoi Google refuse-t-il les fourchettes de prix dans les données structurées produit ?
  12. Pourquoi Google n'affiche-t-il pas toutes les baisses de prix que vous balisez ?
  13. Les GTIN boostent-ils vraiment l'exposition produit sur Google ?
  14. Les données structurées et Merchant Center sont-elles vraiment la stratégie SEO la plus rentable sur le long terme ?
📅
Official statement from (3 years ago)
TL;DR

Google strictly reserves Google Business Profile to businesses with a physical presence — a store, office open to the public, or defined service area. Purely online businesses are not eligible. This policy aims to maintain the integrity of Google's local ecosystem, but raises questions for many e-commerce players.

What you need to understand

Why does Google enforce a physical presence requirement?

Google's logic is straightforward: Google Business Profile (formerly Google My Business) exists to connect users with physical locations. Google's local algorithm relies on geolocation, proximity, and territorial relevance.

Allowing 100% online businesses would create significant noise in local search results. A user searching "plumber Paris 15" expects to find someone who can physically intervene, not a national e-commerce site selling pipes.

What exactly does Google mean by "physical presence"?

Two scenarios are accepted: a premises open to the public (shop, restaurant, medical office) with a visible address, or a service business (plumber, electrician, delivery) covering a defined geographic area.

In the second case, the address can remain hidden from the public, but Google requires it for verification purposes. "SABs" (Service Area Businesses) must define their service perimeter — neighborhoods, cities, departments.

What are the concrete consequences of this restriction?

  • Pure e-commerce players cannot create a profile, even with thousands of customers
  • Marketplaces, SaaS, 100% remote agencies, nomadic consultants are excluded
  • A hybrid business (physical store + e-commerce) remains eligible, but only for the physical address
  • Attempts to circumvent (fake addresses, mail forwarding services) violate guidelines and expose businesses to permanent suspensions

SEO Expert opinion

Is this policy enforced consistently?

On paper, yes. In reality — it's murkier. We regularly observe profiles belonging to businesses without genuine physical presence that slip through the cracks for months before being suspended.

Google's verification system relies on several mechanisms: postal delivery of a PIN card, phone validation, live video verification for certain sectors. But these controls aren't foolproof. Savvy operators use mail forwarding addresses, shared offices, or "friends" to obtain an address — technically, it works until Google detects the anomaly.

Should we consider this rule definitive?

Probably not. Google has already evolved its eligibility criteria in the past. Certain hybrid sectors — like neobanks with limited physical branches — raise questions. [To verify]: we lack clarity on edge cases like temporary pop-up stores, showrooms by appointment only, or companies with headquarters not open to the public.

Alan Kent's position reflects official doctrine, but it doesn't address these gray areas. Google's public guidelines remain intentionally vague on certain points — likely to retain flexibility for manual review of borderline cases.

Are there alternatives for 100% online businesses?

Frankly? Not really within Google's local ecosystem. These businesses must rely on traditional organic SEO, Google Ads, marketplace listings, social media. Some attempt to compensate through partnerships with physical pickup points, but that doesn't grant access to a GBP profile anyway.

Warning: creating a fake profile with a bogus address exposes you to irreversible penalties. Google increasingly cross-references data (Street View, cadastral records, user reports). The game isn't worth the candle.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should I do if my business has legitimate physical presence?

Create your profile without delay. Fill in all fields: primary category, secondary categories, hours, quality photos, description optimized with local keywords. Add attributes specific to your sector.

Enable real-time verification: respond to reviews (positive and negative alike), post regularly, add your products or services. An active profile outperforms a ghost profile — this is documented in several local correlation studies.

How can I avoid mistakes that lead to suspension?

  • Never use a PO box or virtual address service as your primary address
  • Don't create multiple profiles for the same entity (except legitimate multi-location businesses)
  • Don't stuff keyword fields (e.g., "Plumber Paris cheap 24/7" as business name)
  • Don't lie about opening hours or hide your address if you receive customers
  • Verify your NAP (Name, Address, Phone) is exactly identical across your website, directories, legal notices

What if my business is 100% online — any solutions?

Two options — neither miraculous. Either you genuinely open a physical touchpoint (showroom, accessible office), or you forgo GBP and invest elsewhere. Some consultants suggest gray-area setups, but the risks far outweigh potential gains.

Focus your efforts on accessible channels: organic SEO on transactional keywords, optimization of your product pages, quality link building, presence on sector-specific comparison sites and marketplaces. Local traffic via GBP is just one lever — if you don't have access, double down on those still available.

Optimizing a Google Business Profile, combined with a coherent local SEO strategy (citations, reviews, territorial linking), can quickly become technical — especially for multi-location businesses or competitive sectors. If you lack time or in-house expertise, hiring a specialized local SEO agency can help you avoid costly mistakes and unjustified suspensions.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Puis-je créer un profil Google Business si je travaille uniquement de chez moi ?
Oui, si vous offrez un service à domicile chez vos clients (plombier, coach sportif, photographe). Vous pouvez masquer votre adresse personnelle et définir votre zone de service. En revanche, si vous vendez uniquement en ligne sans déplacement physique, vous n'êtes pas éligible.
Les bureaux virtuels ou espaces de coworking sont-ils acceptés par Google ?
Non. Google rejette explicitement les adresses de domiciliation virtuelle. Un espace de coworking peut fonctionner si vous y recevez réellement des clients sur rendez-vous, mais une simple boîte aux lettres ne suffit pas.
Que risque-t-on si Google détecte une fausse adresse ?
Suspension immédiate du profil, souvent définitive. Google peut également pénaliser d'autres profils liés au même propriétaire ou à la même entreprise. Les réhabilitations sont longues, complexes, et rarement couronnées de succès.
Un e-commerçant avec un entrepôt peut-il créer un profil ?
Seulement si cet entrepôt accueille du public — showroom, point retrait, SAV en présentiel. Un simple lieu de stockage fermé au public ne compte pas comme présence physique éligible.
Google peut-il faire évoluer cette règle à l'avenir ?
C'est possible, mais rien ne l'indique pour l'instant. La logique du produit repose sur la géolocalisation physique. Tant que Google Business Profile sert le local, les pure players resteront probablement exclus.
🏷 Related Topics

🎥 From the same video 14

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · published on 28/07/2022

🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →

💬 Comments (0)

Be the first to comment.

2000 characters remaining
🔔

Get real-time analysis of the latest Google SEO declarations

Be the first to know every time a new official Google statement drops — with full expert analysis.

No spam. Unsubscribe in one click.