Fake reviews can be extremely harmful to your business. Learn how to spot them, get them removed, and what you can do to keep them at bay with Feefo.
Your customers are shopping online; they find your product to perfectly suit their needs, and the reviews are almost too good to be true. But how can they know for sure if these reviews are real or fake?
Open platforms such as Google, Amazon and Facebook work on the principle of being open to all, so anyone can create an account and leave a review. But this makes it easy for scammers to write and post fake ratings and reviews, and extremely difficult for consumers to decipher which ones are genuine. And it only takes a quick Google to find somewhere to buy fake reviews.
Feefo's Cost Of Fake Feedback report highlights that 72% of consumers are worried about fake reviews. But, while writing or commissioning fake reviews (also known as astroturfing) is obviously unethical, is it actually illegal in the UK? And what can brands do about them?
To put it in simple terms, it’s fake advertising – from someone who either wants you to buy a product or not.
It’s often people, or online bots, with little or no experience with what they claim to be reviewing.
Sometimes, it may be a competitor writing fake reviews, in order to sabotage a rival business. Or, some businesses may even create or buy fake reviews about themselves, or their products.
Often, your competitors may create fake reviews about your company or products.
For businesses, the only way to guarantee honest reviews is to ensure they’re posted by genuine customers – which is how invite-only platforms like Feefo limit fabrication.
Here at Feefo, we wanted to explore how the UK is being affected by the growing problem of fake reviews. So we commissioned a survey of over 2,000 UK consumers and 500 small-business owners to find out.
We discovered an urgent need for more protection from fakes. With only 8% of consumers confident they could spot a false review, and 40% of businesses negatively affected by malicious feedback, governments need to legislate to protect all parties concerned.
The biggest findings from the report were that:
The EU introduced its Better Enforcement and Modernisation Directive in May 2020, to update consumer rights by banning businesses from using reviews that aren’t left by verified customers. The new rules oblige companies operating in the EU to implement strict processes, aimed at ensuring that published reviews originate from real customers.
Since then, action to tackle fake reviews has been entered into law by several large commerce areas.
India’s Department of Consumer Affairs launched a framework to deal with the problem in 2022. In the US, the FTC announced their Final Ruling banning fake reviews in 2024 – the same year the UK launched the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumer Act (DMCC Act) – which became law in 2025. And fake reviews are now illegal in Australia.
Reviews are important to customers: shoppers want to feel confident that the product or service they are buying is legitimate and good value for money. Everyone needs reliable reviews in order to make the right decisions.
A report by the World Economic Forum estimated that $152 billion of online purchases were directly influenced by fake reviews, making them a costly issue.
Along with being unethical, businesses that buy fake reviews can face the following issues:
With consumers getting better at spotting fake reviews, businesses that acquire phoney ratings are at risk of turning shoppers against them. Many people are taking steps to ensure they aren’t fooled. More than half (52%) of shoppers say they would be suspicious if they couldn’t see any negative reviews.
It’s essential to monitor customer feedback to find out how your business is performing. Adding fake reviews into the mix prevents any meaningful analysis of the data that could provide useful insight on what is and isn’t working.
Purposefully misleading customers goes against the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumer Act (DMCC Act) 2024. And It’ll also put a business’s website in Google’s bad books.
Some websites set traps to find fake or bought reviews as soon as they’re created. Most review platforms, such as Feefo, shift and filter through hundreds of reviews a day, to ensure that they only publish authentic reviews.
Any business caught attempting to scam customers could face a fine, or be taken to court in more complex cases. In fact, businesses falling foul of the new law could face fines of up to £300,000.
Are fake reviews illegal?
The short answer is: yes.
Purposefully misleading your customers places you in violation of the DMCC Act 2024 as well as advertising codes.
Under this regulation, businesses cannot conduct misleading actions or omissions which are likely to cause a consumer to make a different decision – this may include faking reviews or preventing customers from leaving genuine negative reviews.
Not only is it illegal to post fake positive reviews about your business, but it’s also illegal to post damaging fake reviews about another business, such as a competitor. Trying to sabotage another business like this could leave your business open to being sued for malicious falsehood.
Fake reviews have become harder to spot over the years, but there are still tell-tale signs to look out for. Here are our top tips for easily identifying whether the reviews your business receives are genuine or not.
One of the most obvious signs of a fake review is if the review is about the wrong product or service.
See if the reviewer has left their name and cross-reference it with your records. If you don’t have it in your database, there’s a chance they may not be a genuine customer.
Does the review itself make grammatical sense? If it has lots of spelling mistakes or formatting issues, it could be a clue that it’s fake.
Generic reviews that are overly positive or negative and don’t mention any specifics are immediately suspicious. If customers have had an exceptionally good or bad experience with a company, they’ll likely want to leave some details. For example, if the package arrived late, they might name the member of staff that dealt with their inquiry if their experience was positive.
A lack of negative reviews can be a huge sign that what you’re reading may not be the real deal. 52% of consumers get suspicious if there are no negative reviews for the product or service they want. In fact, products with a rating of 4-4.9 stars are more likely to convert than those with only glowing 5-star reviews by a whopping 173%.
Real reviews will usually include comments regarding how the product or service they purchased has impacted their life in some way. If the feedback doesn’t refer to value, or seems unemotional, it could be fake.
If the review contains industry-specific jargon – terms you would only expect someone who works in your business sector to know – the comment may have been left by a competitor, rather than a genuine customer.
If the review includes a hyperlink to another website, that’s a big red flag. It could be a competitor trying to lure potential customers to their site instead. Even worse, your customers might get directed to an unprotected, dangerous website.
A sudden influx of either positive or negative reviews should always raise alarm bells, unless you’ve recently made a big push to ask customers for feedback.
Look at the reviewer themselves and the other reviews they’ve left; if they're all the same or are strikingly similar, there’s a big chance they aren’t a genuine customer.
If you’re still not sure if a review is genuine, there are a few online tools you can use to help such as Fakespot.
Several platforms offer built-in fraud detection worth knowing about, though they vary in what they can actually tell you. Fakespot uses AI to analyse reviews on Amazon, Google Play, TripAdvisor, and other platforms, assigning a reliability grade to a product’s overall reviews. ReviewMeta focuses on Amazon and flags patterns such as incentivised reviews or reviewer anomalies.
Google and Trustpilot both run automated and manual moderation systems, though the quality of enforcement varies. Feefo operates differently by collecting reviews only from verified buyers, removing the opportunity for fraudulent submissions before they happen. That structural approach means your data is more reliable, because it addresses the problem at the point of submission rather than retrospectively.
If you’re currently using an open platform, the tools above are a reasonable starting point – although they’re a mitigation, not a solution.
Fake positive reviews don’t always come from outside. Some businesses unknowingly, or knowingly, find they have inflated ratings from employees, paid review agencies, or incentivised customers. Identifying this type of manipulation requires a different approach to spotting external abuse.
The most reliable starting point is your invite-to-review chain. Platforms like Feefo record the full journey – from transaction to review. That audit trail doesn’t exist with open reviews, but there are patterns worth monitoring.
Repeated reviews from the same IP address or device suggest coordinated posting. Some platforms flag this automatically.
A sudden spike in 5-star reviews from accounts with no review history is a common pattern when agencies are involved.Reviewer profiling: Reviews from accounts created recently, with no other review activity, or where the same phrases appear across multiple submissions, indicate bulk posting.
If review language closely resembles your own marketing copy or internal communications, that is a sign of internal authorship.
If you are concerned that a third party is posting on your behalf without authorisation, audit your review invite process. Check whether any reviews were submitted without a corresponding transaction in your records – this is usually where the problem sits.
On open platforms, there’s no fool proof way to stop a competitor posting a malicious review. But there are practical steps that reduce your exposure and give you the best chance of getting harmful reviews removed quickly.
The most effective single step is switching to a platform like Feefo, where only customers who have made a verified purchase receive a review invite. This does not stop competitors from posting on Google or Trustpilot, but it ensures your primary review presence is protected from interference.
Beyond that:
Set up alerts on Google Business Profile for new reviews so you are notified immediately when something appears. The faster you identify a suspicious review, the faster you can act on it.
Keep records of your customer transactions. If a negative review appears from someone who has never purchased from you, that transaction history is your evidence when you report it to the platform or escalate to legal action.
Most major platforms, including Google, have a flagging mechanism for reviews that violate their policies. Provide as much supporting evidence as you can, including proof that the reviewer was not a customer.
If a competitor posts a review that contains demonstrably false statements and you can prove it caused financial harm, you may have grounds to pursue a claim for malicious falsehood. Seek legal advice before pursuing this route.
Even when a review is false, potential customers are watching how you handle it. A calm, factual public response signals confidence and transparency.
The good news is that the laws around fake reviews don’t just apply to businesses; consumers can also be held to account. If you find yourself under fire from unjust feedback (such as a defamatory review from a competitor), here are a few things you can do:
Get solid proof – To get any review removed or to take legal action, you will need to be able to prove that the feedback is false.
Get in touch with the review platform – Contact the review platform to see if the review can be removed.
Report it – If the fake review has been left on your Google ‘My Business’ page, then you can report this through Google’s own interface; however, you’ll need to prove that the review wasn’t left by a genuine customer.
Get legal support – It is possible to sue an individual for leaving a fake review, but the process can be lengthy. Firstly, you must contact a solicitor and have solid proof that the allegations are false. Then, you need to be able to prove that you have lost business as a direct result before you can take it to court.
There’s plenty you can do to mitigate the impact fake reviews have on your business’ reputation once you’re aware of the problem.
The best way to eliminate fake reviews is to take fake reviewers out of the equation. By using an invite-only feedback platform, like Feefo, your business has the power to send a personal review request to genuine customers only.
This means every review is verified, so consumers know they can trust them and your business. It also saves your business precious time, as your team won’t have to check and verify every single review themselves.
At Feefo, we’ve been standing against fake feedback for years. Learn more about our ‘Gold Standard’ and what this means for you, or check out our pricing.