Why VPNs Matter When Buying Google Reviews: Location Spoofing Explained
Google uses location data to validate reviews. It checks where the reviewer is about the business. If a review is posted from thousands of miles away with no physical visit, that review may get flagged or removed. This is part of Google’s effort to maintain authenticity and reduce spam. When businesses attempt to buy reviews, they run into this filter. That’s where VPNs come in.
What a VPN Actually Does
A Virtual Private Network, or VPN, masks a device’s real IP address and replaces it with one from another location. This makes it appear as though the user is in a different city or country. It’s often used to protect privacy online. But in the context of buying reviews, VPNs serve another purpose. They allow the review to look like it came from near the business’s physical address. This trick is called location spoofing.
How Location Spoofing Works in Practice
If you run a café in Seattle and buy reviews from accounts in Europe or Asia, those reviews may raise red flags. However, if those same accounts use a VPN set to a Seattle IP, it can appear more believable. Google sees a local user posting a review shortly after (or during) a visit. This simulated proximity makes it harder for systems to tell that the review was paid for. It’s not foolproof, but it helps bypass some filters.
Why VPN Choice Matters
Not all VPNs are created equal. Some use shared IPs that Google already recognizes and blacklists. Others …



