No, Google reviews allow one review per account per place; edit your original or add updates instead.
Wondering if you can stack several comments on the same business page? The short answer: one per account per place. You can post fresh feedback by editing the original or adding new photos, but a second standalone entry for the same spot won’t stick. This guide shows what’s allowed, what gets filtered, and how to update your take the right way.
Posting More Than One Google Review: Rules That Apply
Google’s system ties each rating and write-up to a place and a single profile. That design keeps ratings fair and prevents one person from flooding a page. If you try to submit another standalone entry for the same spot, the platform either routes you to edit your first one or quietly filters the duplicate. Reposts that repeat the same text across accounts raise red flags as well.
What The Policies Say In Plain Terms
Google bans fake engagement and repetitive content. That includes content posted from multiple accounts to push ratings, and the same text posted several times. Both fall under the Maps user rules and can trigger removal or account limits. You’re free to change your rating and rewrite your text on the original entry, which keeps the place’s history tidy and still reflects your latest visit.
Allowed Vs. Not Allowed At A Glance
Use this quick matrix to decide the right action. It’s broad and covers the common “Can I post again?” scenarios for places, profiles, and updates.
| Scenario | Allowed? | What To Do Instead |
|---|---|---|
| Second standalone review on the same place from the same account | No | Edit your first entry; adjust stars, rewrite text, add fresh photos |
| Same review text pasted to multiple places | No | Write unique text based on your actual visit to each place |
| Posting from another account to boost a place you visited | No | Use one account; ask real customers to share their own experience |
| Updating your rating after a new visit | Yes | Edit the original; explain what changed since your last visit |
| Leaving ratings for different places | Yes | Post a normal entry for each unique place you’ve visited |
| Adding new photos without rewriting text | Yes | Attach photos to the same entry; captions help readers |
| Copying parts of your old text word-for-word into the edit | Risky | Summarize the update in new words; keep it fresh and specific |
Why One Entry Per Place Works Better
Readers want a single, clear history of a real visit. A lone thread with updated text shows how service, pricing, or wait times changed across months. That beats a pile of near-duplicates that say the same thing. It also keeps the star average from swinging due to repeat posts by the same person.
How Edits And Updates Work
You can open your profile, find the original entry, and pick Edit. Change the star rating, rewrite your notes, and attach new photos. This keeps your voice in one place and gives context to people checking the page later. If service improved, say what changed. If it slipped, list specifics such as wait time, order accuracy, or staff response. That clarity helps shoppers make choices fast.
Policy Lines You Should Know
The Maps user-generated content rules ban fake engagement and repetitive content. That includes posts from multiple accounts to sway ratings and the same text posted several times. You can read the sections on “Fake engagement” and “Repetitive content” in Google’s Maps user-generated content policy. For edit steps across devices, see Google’s help page on how to edit or delete a review. These two pages set the guardrails and the workflow.
When A Fresh Visit Feels Like A New Story
Say you visited a coffee shop last year and gave three stars for slow service. Now you’re back, and things look better. That’s not a new standalone entry. It’s an edit to your original with updated notes and a new rating. Readers get the full arc in one place, and the shop gets feedback it can track.
What To Write In An Update
- Lead with what changed: speed, cleanliness, staff, menu, pricing, parking, or seating.
- Add fresh details: date of the new visit, time of day, and any specific staff interaction.
- Adjust the stars: nudge up or down to reflect the latest experience.
- Attach new media: clear photos of dishes, receipts, or the space.
What Raises Spam Flags
Posting the same blurb to several places, creating second accounts to stack praise, and pasting the same promo code into multiple entries all trigger filters. Even well-meant reposts can vanish if they look repetitive. Keep each write-up tied to one real visit and written in your own words.
How To Edit A Past Review Step-By-Step
Here’s a simple path to refresh your text and rating. The steps are short and work on desktop and phones.
Desktop Steps
- Open Maps and sign in.
- Search the place and open its page.
- Select Write a review; your past entry appears if one exists.
- Choose Edit, adjust stars, rewrite, and save.
Android Or iPhone Steps
- Open the app and tap your profile tile.
- Go to your contributions.
- Open See all reviews.
- Tap the three dots next to the entry and pick Edit review.
What To Do If You Can’t Edit
If the button doesn’t show, you may be signed into the wrong profile or you never posted to that place. Switch accounts and try again. In rare cases, a place merges with another listing or closes, which can move your past entry. Search both names and check your profile list.
Troubleshooting: Your Text Doesn’t Show Publicly
Sometimes entries don’t appear right away. Filters review content for spam patterns and policy issues. Duplicates, off-topic rants, and incentive-driven posts tend to disappear. If you think your write-up is clean, wait a bit and try a short edit. A small rewrite and a couple of clear photos often help.
| Symptom | Likely Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Entry posted but not visible | Filter flagged it as repetitive or low-quality | Rewrite with new wording; add specifics and photos |
| Second review vanished | Duplicate for the same place | Edit the first entry; do not repost a second one |
| Review removed days later | Policy issue spotted after posting | Check the policy page, edit, and submit again |
| “Write a review” shows blank form | Signed into a different profile | Switch accounts; open your contributions list |
| Business profile shows a warning banner | Listing under review for fake entries | Wait for the banner to clear; avoid new posts for now |
Best Practices For A Helpful Edit
Good edits are short, precise, and dated. State when you returned, what changed, and why your stars moved. That’s it. A clear note like “Return visit on a Friday evening; orders arrived in 7 minutes; staff fixed a mix-up fast” helps shoppers far more than a second standalone entry would.
Make Each Entry Stand On Its Own
- Stick to one place: write about the exact location you visited, not the brand in general.
- Use your own words: avoid templates and copy-paste text.
- Skip incentives: no discounts or gifts in exchange for praise.
- Stay respectful: critique service and product details, not people.
For Business Owners: What To Ask Of Customers
If you manage a listing, invite customers to post one honest entry tied to a real visit. Don’t push the same person to repost the same blurb, and don’t offer rewards for edits or star changes. Ask for details that help shoppers: date, order type, wait time, and any fix you delivered. Reply to entries in a calm tone and note any changes you’ve made.
Handling Repeat Comments From The Same Person
When a regular wants to share a new take, ask them to edit their original. That preserves history and avoids filter trips. If you see duplicates from the same profile or suspicious cross-posting, you can flag them through your Business Profile dashboard. Clean pages build trust and keep new readers engaged.
Common Myths, Cleared Up
“Multiple Accounts Make It Fine”
No. Posts from several profiles controlled by one person count as fake engagement. The policy bans that pattern, and removals are common once detected.
“A New Visit Means A New Entry”
Not on the same place page. Edits are the path. Add a quick note, adjust stars, and attach proof like a receipt crop or clear dish photo.
“Copying Text Saves Time”
Repeated text can trigger the repetitive-content rule. Fresh wording protects your post and gives readers better info.
Citations And Official Rules
Two links worth bookmarking:
- Maps user-generated content policy — see the lines on fake engagement and repetitive content.
- Edit or delete a review — step-by-step instructions on updating your entry.
Quick Checklist Before You Hit Post
- One review per place per account
- Use edits for return visits
- Write unique, first-hand text
- Add clear photos that match the visit
- Avoid incentives, cross-posting, and repeat blurbs
- Keep your tone calm and specific
Final Take
You get one slot per place. Make it count with solid details, then keep it fresh through edits. That approach respects the rules, helps readers, and gives owners feedback they can act on—without tripping any filters.
