β‘ Quick Answer
Multi-location Google Business Profile duplicate issues happen when Google finds two profiles for the same business address β and it will suppress or merge them automatically. To fix it: audit all your listings on Google Maps, remove or merge the duplicate yourself from your GBP dashboard, or contact Google Support with both Profile IDs to request a manual merge. Read on for the full step-by-step process.
You built something real. Maybe two locations, maybe five, maybe ten branches across Kerala. Each location has its own Google Business Profile. Things were running fine β until one morning, a branch just vanishes from Google Maps. Or two of your profiles mysteriously merge into one. Or Google flags one of your listings and stops showing it altogether.
This is not a random glitch. This is Google dealing with what it sees as multi-location Google Business Profile duplicate issues β and it does not always get it right.
And here is the really frustrating part. Google can take action without warning you. One day your Kochi branch is visible. The next, it is gone β merged into your Trivandrum profile, or suppressed because an old listing from three years ago still exists with the same address.
In this guide, I am going to walk you through exactly why multi-location Google Business Profile duplicate issues happen, how to spot them before Google acts, and how to fix them step by step.
Why Multi-Location Google Business Profile Duplicate Issues Are So Common
Here is the truth β running one GBP correctly is already a job. Running five or ten is a whole different challenge. Here is why multi-location Google Business Profile duplicate issues catch so many businesses off guard:
Multiple People Created Listings
A previous staff member, agency, or franchisee created a profile for your location β and nobody deleted it when they left.
Address Change Not Cleaned Up
Your branch moved to a new building. You updated the address on your main profile β but the old listing still exists at the old address.
Third-Party Directory Data
Data aggregators like Justdial, Sulekha, or Yelp pushed your business details to Google β creating an unverified listing you never knew about.
Rebranding or Name Change
Your restaurant changed its name. The old profile still exists under the previous brand name β Google now sees two businesses at the same location.
Google has significantly increased automated action on duplicate profiles in 2026. Listings that were sitting dormant for years are now being suppressed or merged without notice. If you have not audited your multi-location profiles recently, now is the time.
How to Find Multi-Location Google Business Profile Duplicate Issues Before Google Does
The best time to fix a duplicate is before Google notices it. Here is how to get ahead of it.
Step 1 β Search Google Maps for Every Location
Open Google Maps and search your business name for each city or area where you operate. Look carefully at the results. If you see more than one pin for the same location, you have a duplicate. Also check for listings under your old business name or old address.
Step 2 β Check Your GBP Dashboard
Go to business.google.com and log in. Check every profile listed there. Look for locations that are marked as "Duplicate," "Suspended," or "Pending verification." These are your warning signs.
Step 3 β Use the Bulk Location Manager (10+ Locations)
If you manage 10 or more locations, Google's Bulk Location Manager lets you see all your profiles in one dashboard. This is the fastest way to spot inconsistencies, duplicate entries, or profiles that are being suppressed across a large portfolio. Access it at business.google.com/locations.
Step 4 β Search Google with Your Phone Number and Address
Type your phone number directly into Google Search. If two different business profiles appear with the same number, that is a strong sign of multi-location Google Business Profile duplicate issues. Do the same with your exact street address.
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How to Fix Multi-Location Google Business Profile Duplicate Issues β Step-by-Step
Once you have found a duplicate, the fix depends on who owns it and what kind of duplicate it is. Here are all the scenarios and exactly what to do for each one.
Scenario A β You Own Both Duplicate Profiles
Good news β this one you can sort out yourself without needing Google's help at all. If you can see both the main profile and the duplicate inside your GBP dashboard, do this:
Decide which profile to keep
Choose the profile with the most reviews, the most complete information, and the correct current address. This is your "primary" profile. The other one will be removed.
Open the duplicate in your GBP dashboard
Go to business.google.com, select the duplicate profile (not the one you want to keep), and click on it.
Go to Business Profile Settings β Advanced Settings
Inside the profile, click the three-dot menu β Business Profile Settings β Advanced Settings. Note down the Business Profile ID shown at the top β you will need this if you request a merge.
Remove the duplicate
Click "Remove Business" or "Mark as Permanently Closed" if the location no longer exists. If it is the same active location as your main profile, request a merge (see Scenario B below).
Confirm and monitor
After removal, it may take 3β7 days for the duplicate to disappear from Google Search and Maps. Monitor both listings to confirm the change has taken effect.
Scenario B β You Want to Merge Two Profiles You Own
Think of merging as combining two glasses of water into one bigger glass. All the reviews, photos, and data from both profiles come together. You want to do this when the exact same business has ended up with two live profiles at the exact same address.
Get the Profile ID of both listings
Go to each profile in your GBP dashboard β three-dot menu β Business Profile Settings β Advanced Settings β copy the Business Profile ID for each.
Go to Google Business Profile Support
Visit support.google.com/business/gethelp and search for "Merge duplicate Business Profiles." Follow the on-screen prompts.
Provide both Profile IDs when prompted
Clearly state which profile you want to keep as the primary and which should be merged into it. Explain that both represent the same business at the same address.
Wait for confirmation
Google typically processes merge requests within 3β7 business days. Most genuine reviews from both profiles will transfer to the primary listing.
Before merging, take a screenshot of both profiles including their review counts and star ratings. This gives you a reference point in case reviews do not transfer as expected.
Scenario C β Google Has Incorrectly Merged Two Separate Locations
Honestly, this is the one that makes business owners the most stressed β and understandably so. You have two genuinely different locations β say, one in Kochi and one in Thrissur β and Google has merged them into a single profile. Now all your Thrissur customers are seeing Kochi information.
Here is how to appeal and fix multi-location Google Business Profile duplicate issues caused by an incorrect merge:
Gather your evidence
Collect proof that both locations are genuinely distinct β separate addresses, separate phone numbers, separate GST or registration details, photos of each location's signage.
Contact Google Business Profile Support
Go to support.google.com/business/gethelp and select "Appeal duplicate status." Explain that two distinct and eligible businesses were incorrectly merged.
Submit your evidence
Provide the documentation you collected β different addresses, phone numbers, photos, and business registration details. The more concrete proof you submit, the stronger your appeal.
Follow up if needed
Google's initial response may take up to 14 days. If rejected, you can escalate by contacting GBP support again and referencing your case number with additional evidence.
Scenario D β The Duplicate Is an Unverified Listing You Do Not Own
Sometimes a duplicate appears that you did not create and do not manage. It might have come from a data aggregator or been created by a former franchisee. Here is exactly what to do:
- Claim the duplicate listing. Go to the unverified profile on Google Maps, click "Claim this business," and verify it. Once you own it, you can remove or merge it properly.
- If you cannot claim it, report it directly on Google Maps by clicking the three dots on the listing β "Suggest an edit" β "Close or remove" β "Duplicate of another place." Google will review the report.
- Contact GBP Support with the URL of the duplicate listing and your owned profile's ID, and request removal as a duplicate.
What Happens to Reviews When Duplicate GBP Profiles Are Merged
Every business owner we speak to asks the same thing when they hear the word merge. The short answer is that most of your reviews will survive β but not every single one.
| Review Type | Transfers After Merge? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Genuine customer reviews | β Yes | Most authentic reviews transfer to the primary profile |
| Policy-violating reviews | β No | Reviews already flagged by Google do not transfer |
| Total review count | β οΈ May fluctuate | Count may temporarily drop then stabilise over a few days |
| Star rating average | β οΈ Will recalculate | The combined average of both profiles is recalculated after merge |
| Photos and posts | β Yes | Photos from both profiles typically carry over to the primary listing |
πΊοΈ Want Your Multi-Location Business to Rank Higher on Google Maps?
Fixing duplicates is just the start. A fully optimised GBP for each location β with consistent NAP data, local keywords, and a strong review strategy β is what drives real foot traffic.
How to Prevent Multi-Location Google Business Profile Duplicate Issues from Coming Back
Fixing a duplicate takes a day. Keeping them away takes a system. I have worked with dozens of multi-location businesses. The ones that never deal with this headache all do these same things:
- Assign one owner per location's GBP. Every profile should have a single designated manager. When staff changes, update the profile access immediately β do not leave old managers with editing rights.
- Use consistent NAP data everywhere. NAP stands for Name, Address, Phone number. These three details must be identical across your website, Google profile, and every online directory. Even small differences β "St" vs "Street" or "+91" vs "0" before a phone number β can trigger Google to create a second listing.
- Audit your profiles monthly. Set a monthly reminder to search Google Maps for your business name and check your GBP dashboard. Google's machine learning can modify your profiles without notifying you β changing categories, adding or removing services, even updating your address.
- Monitor third-party directories. Sites like Justdial, Sulekha, IndiaMART, and Bing Places regularly push data to Google. Check these sources regularly and ensure your information there matches your GBP exactly.
- Do not create service-area pages as separate profiles. If you serve multiple cities from one physical location, do not create separate GBP listings for each city. Google considers this a violation and will flag them as duplicates or spam.
- When you move or rename a location, update and clean up. Update the address on your main profile and check for any old listing at the previous address. Close it properly rather than leaving it live with outdated information.
Never create a new GBP listing when you move to a new address. Always update the existing profile's address instead. Creating a new profile leaves the old one live β which Google will eventually flag as a duplicate of the updated one.
Official Google Links for Multi-Location GBP Duplicate Issues
Bookmark these β they are the only legitimate places to resolve multi-location Google Business Profile duplicate issues:
- π GBP Main Dashboard: business.google.com
- π Bulk Location Manager (10+ locations): business.google.com/locations
- π Resolve Duplicate Profiles β Official Help: support.google.com/business/answer/12756178
- π Contact GBP Support Directly: support.google.com/business/gethelp
Frequently Asked Questions
The Bottom Line
Let me be direct with you β multi-location Google Business Profile duplicate issues are not just some technical admin problem. They can pull your business completely off Google Maps, merge your best-performing location with a weaker one, and cost you customers who simply cannot find you.
But here is what I want you to hold onto β every single scenario above is fixable β as long as you act before Google does. Audit your listings now. Clean up old profiles. Keep your NAP data consistent across every platform. And if Google has already merged or flagged one of your locations incorrectly, you have a clear path to appeal and recover it.
For multi-location businesses, your Google Business Profile strategy is not a set-it-and-forget-it task. It requires regular attention β and and that investment pays back every time a local customer searches for a business like yours.
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