Remove a bad Google review from your dental practice.
A 1-star drop costs the average dental practice 5–9% of revenue (Harvard). If the review violates one of Google's six content policies, we can get it removed.
$399 if it works. $0 if it doesn't.
$399
flat fee per removed review
70%
removed in the first 30 days
7–14 days
typical Google decision
HIPAA-aware
we never store review text
What we actually do
Anonymous Patient
Awful. The hygienist openly discussed my prior treatment in front of other patients in the waiting room. Don't go here.
Gone.
The mechanics
Google removes reviews that violate their policies. Here are the six.
We file your case under whichever category fits best. The category we pick is the entire reason a review gets removed.
Category 01: Spam or fake
Competitor account bombing. A reviewer who suddenly posts on five practices in your city. Brand-new accounts with only negative reviews.
Category 02: Off-topic
A rant about insurance. A complaint about a billing dispute that never touched clinical care. A review meant for a different location.
Category 03: Conflict of interest
A competing practice posting under a pseudonym. A former employee with a grudge. A vendor you stopped paying.
Category 04: Personal information
Names a patient by full name. Names a specific treatment or diagnosis. Exposes health info. (Common in dental — and a strong removal angle.)
Category 05: Hate speech or harassment
Personal attacks on you or your staff. Slurs. Threats. Anything past criticism of the service into attacking the person.
Category 06: Restricted content
Profanity, sexual content, references to regulated or illegal products. Less common but high removal odds when it lands.
70% removed in the first 30 days. 15% after. The clock matters. If a case doesn't fit one of these six, we tell you on the quote screen — before you pay.
The cost of leaving it up
What that one star is costing you right now.
You already know it's hurting. Here's how much.
5–9%
Revenue drop the average local business takes from a one-star rating drop.
Harvard Business School
73%
Of patients click the higher-rated practice when comparing two above 4.0 stars.
BrightLocal Consumer Review Survey
3 reviews
Median number of reviews a patient reads before deciding where to book.
BrightLocal Consumer Review Survey
New-patient lifetime value in dental runs $1,500–$6,000 depending on insurance mix. Do the math on a 5% revenue drop.
How it works
Four steps. About 7–14 days door to door.
You paste the review URL
The form takes 2 minutes. Pick the policy reasons that apply and watch the price update live. No account needed for the quote.
RevGon qualifies the case
Our team reads the review against Google's policy categories and picks the strongest angle. Weak cases get a 'no' on the quote screen — we don't take money we can't earn.
RevGon files the policy report
Through Google's public review-flagging flow. We never log into your Google Business Profile. We never message the reviewer.
Google decides
Median 7–14 days. If they deny the first report, we escalate once with a different policy angle. If they still say no, your case closes and you pay nothing.
The alternatives
Three ways this gets done. One of them is us.
Flag it yourself
Free
- Speed
- 5 minutes to file
- Outcome
- ~10% success rate
- Risk
- None — but unrepresented flags get ignored more often than not
Reputation agency
$200–500/month retainer
- Speed
- 6–12 month contracts
- Outcome
- Mostly suppression, not removal. Some ask for your GBP login.
- Risk
- Review-gating tactics can get your profile suspended
RevGon
$399 per case · $0 if no
- Speed
- 7–14 day median decision
- Outcome
- 70% in first 30 days, 15% after
- Risk
- None. No logins, no reviewer contact, no suppression.
Pricing
One price. Two flavors. No upsell.
If Google removes it
$399
Flat fee per removed review. One policy angle, one filing, escalation if denied. Complex multi-angle cases quote up to $599 on the URL screen — never a surprise.
If Google says no
$0
Card authorization is voided. We tell you Google's reasoning so you know where it landed.
No retainer, no setup, no monthly bill, no contracts. The quote you see on the URL-paste screen is the price you pay.
The boundaries
Where this stops.
Honest about what we won't help with — and what we'll never do, even when you ask.
What we won't help with
These read as legitimate opinions to Google. No service can remove them.
What we'll never do
Even if you ask. Hard rules. The case stays between you, us, and Google.
Ask for your Google Business login
Your profile is yours. We use the same public reporting flow any Google user has access to.
Contact the reviewer
It can backfire badly and it can violate Google's policy. The case stays between you, us, and Google.
Promise an outcome
Google decides. We pick the strongest policy angle and file. The decision is theirs, and we tell you fast either way.
Store the review text
Dental reviews can contain patient info. We save the URL only. Most other services don't.
Got a review you want gone?
Paste the URL. The quote takes 2 minutes. You pay nothing if Google doesn't remove it.
Three quick answers
Will Google ban my listing?
No. We use Google's public reporting flow, the same one Google built for business owners. We never log in to your Google Business Profile. Flagging a policy-violating review does not put your listing at risk.
What if Google says no?
You pay nothing. We file once, escalate once if denied, and close the case with no charge if Google still says no. The card authorization is voided.
How long does it take?
Median 7–14 days. Spam and PII violations move faster, often under a week. We email at every step so you always know the status.
