Skip to content
  • Texas | Arizona | Virginia | Idaho | Illinois
  • (888) 705-0930
  • info@therawragency.com
Facebook-f Twitter Instagram Linkedin-in
rawr logo short
  • Home
  • About
  • Solutions
    colorized icons 04
    B2B Marketing
    colorized icons 05
    B2C Marketing
    colorized icons 06
    Online Visibility Management
  • Industries
    colorized icons 07
    Healthcare
    colorized icons 08
    Manufacturing
    colorized icons 10
    Home Services
    colorized icons 09
    Professional Services (B2B)
    colorized icons 11
    Retail
  • Services
    colorized icons 01
    Brand Strategy
    • Graphic Design
    • Corporate Brand Identity
    • Sales Enablement
    • Editorial Calendar Management
    colorized icons 02
    Website Design
    • WordPress Website Development
    • Conversion Rate Optimization
    • eCommerce Development
    • Content Strategy & Copywriting
    colorized icons 03
    Digital Marketing
    • Digital Marketing Strategy
    • Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
    • Pay-Per-Click (PPC) Management
    • Content Marketing & Digital PR
    • Account Based Marketing (B2B)
    • Marketing Automation
    • Social Media Management
  • Blog
  • Contact
Let's Talk

Google may suspend merchant sites that show invalid product availability

  • June 22, 2021
  • General
  • Agency
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email

Google Merchant Center has a new policy named “Inaccurate availability” that is caused “due to inconsistent availability between the landing page and checkout pages on your website,” the company said. This policy replaces the existing “Delivery issues” policy violation and goes into place on September 1, 2021.

What is the inaccurate availability policy. Google explained that a Google Merchant Center account can receive a warning or a suspension when “one or more of your products show as unavailable for purchase at checkout even though they’re displayed as being in stock on your landing pages.” If you are showing users that a product is available on the product landing page but when they click to add it to the cart, it changes that availability as not available, that can lead to violating this policy.

Google said “it’s a bad customer experience if product availability changes from “in stock” on the landing page to “out of stock” or “unavailable” after the product has been added to a cart, and customers will be less likely to try and purchase from your store in the future.”

Reasons you may have violated this policy. Google laid out some common reasons why you may have violated this policy, they include:

  • Use of IP detection / geolocation. Don’t change the availability of your product based on a user’s location. If you only target certain locations within a country, use regional pricing and availability.
  • Non-functional buy button. The product appears to be available on the landing page, but after pressing the buy button, it shows as out of stock or unavailable.
  • Product cannot be shipped to a home address. During checkout, after providing the shipping address, the product is no longer available and cannot be directly delivered to a user’s doorstep, excluding PO Boxes. If you have a product that’s only available for in-store pickup or that ships to a pick-up point, check the shipping cost guidelines to see whether these options are allowed in your country of sale. Otherwise, ensure your product is excluded from online offers by using the excluded destination [excluded_destination] attribute. Alternatively, you may consider trying local inventory ads.
  • Products are not available to check out within the whole country of sale. If you sell products that are only available in some of the regions of the country of sale, check to see whether regional availability and pricing is available in your country of sale.

Pricing changes also. In February, we reported that Google can also suspend merchants that show higher prices in the cart than they show on the product landing page.

Receive a violation. If you received a violation for this, you can learn more about to handle it over here in this help document.

Why we care. If you run an e-commerce site or have a client that runs an e-commerce site, you should ensure that the product availability that is displayed at checkout matches what is displayed on the landing page.

Do not upset your users by telling them a product is in stock and only after clicking over to the cart page, show that product is no longer available.

The post Google may suspend merchant sites that show invalid product availability appeared first on Search Engine Land.


Source: IAB

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email

Recent Blog Posts

9 Hidden Revenue Blockers Every CRO Needs to Eliminate

February 3, 2025

What Is B2B Appointment Setting?

November 29, 2024

Leveraging LinkedIn for Targeted Growth

November 12, 2024

Mastering B2B Prospecting: Key Strategies for Sales Success

November 4, 2024

Maximize Marketing ROI: How Cost per Lead Can Fuel Your Business Growth

June 13, 2024
View More
rawr logo short
Facebook-f Twitter Instagram Linkedin-in
Get In Touch
  • Texas | Arizona | Virginia | Idaho | Illinois
  • (888) 705-0930
  • info@therawragency.com
Send An Email

"*" indicates required fields

Copyright 2025 | The RAWR Agency, LLC. |

Sitemap | Privacy Policy

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.OkNo