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If you run a small local business in Australia and want to enhance your online reputation, you’ve likely asked yourself: what’s the best site to buy Google reviews?
I’ve spent the past several years helping Australian business owners navigate this exact question. After testing and comparing dozens of providers for clients across Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane, I’ve narrowed the field down to five platforms that consistently deliver without putting a Google Business Profile at unnecessary risk.
In this guide, I’ll break down pricing, delivery speed, and how each provider actually performs in practice, plus what ‘safe’ really means when you’re paying for reviews and how to stay on the right side of Google’s policies.
ReviewGrow is the provider I recommend most often for businesses looking to increase google reviews, and it’s the one I use as the benchmark against everyone else on this list.
It specialises in geo-targeted Google reviews written to sound like real Australian customers, delivered on a drip-feed schedule that mirrors organic review patterns.
The platform positions itself around three core promises: reviews from real, verified accounts rather than bots, drip-fed delivery for natural-looking growth, and a money-back guarantee backed by lifetime support.
Key Features
Mini Case Study
One client I worked with, a Melbourne physiotherapy clinic, sat at 3.8 stars with 11 reviews for over a year. We used ReviewGrow to add 25 reviews over six weeks alongside a genuine review-request campaign, choosing a female-skewed reviewer mix and location targeting to match the clinic’s actual patient base. Within two months the clinic’s rating climbed to 4.6 and their Google Business Profile calls increased by roughly 40 percent month over month, based on the clinic’s own call-tracking data.
What Users Say
Clients I’ve referred to ReviewGrow consistently mention two things: the reviews read naturally and reference specific details like staff names or services, and support responds quickly when something needs adjusting.
Several niche businesses, a yoga studio and a hair salon among them, specifically called out being able to request reviewers of a matching gender and have specific instructors or stylists named. A few have flagged that pricing sits above budget competitors, which tracks with the quality difference.
Pros
Cons
Pricing: Packages run from $18 for 2 reviews up to $615 for 75 reviews, with per-review cost dropping as order size increases. A monthly subscription option is also available for ongoing delivery.
Verdict: If budget allows for it, ReviewGrow is my top recommendation for any Australian business that wants reviews that hold up to scrutiny, especially where gender, location or industry-specific detail matters.
BoostMe built its reputation on social growth services before expanding into Google reviews, and that speed-focused DNA shows. It offers two tiers, a standard “real reviews” package and a custom-written option with images, and backs orders with a 30-day money-back guarantee plus 15-day package refills if reviews drop off.
Key Features
What Users Say
Tradies and hospitality operators I’ve worked with like BoostMe specifically for time-sensitive situations, such as needing a rating boost before a local marketing push. The no-password checkout and 24/7 support come up often as reassurance for first-time buyers. A couple of clients noted the review wording occasionally repeats phrasing across a batch when the standard package is used instead of the custom-written option.
Pros
Cons
Pricing: Packages start at $9.15 for a single review and scale up to $1,199 for 150 reviews, with the discount percentage increasing on larger orders.
Verdict: BoostMe is my pick when a client needs results in days, not weeks, and understands the slightly higher risk that comes with faster delivery. The custom-written tier is worth the extra cost over the standard package.
Trustlyr is built around managing review campaigns across several Google Business Profiles at once, which makes it a solid fit for franchises and multi-clinic groups.
What Users Say
Feedback I’ve heard from multi-location operators is mixed. The location-splitting tool is genuinely useful, but a few clients found the support response time slower than ReviewGrow or BoostMe.
Pros
Cons
Pricing: Real 5-Star – From $9.15 per location bundle.
Verdict: Worth considering specifically for multi-location accounts, less compelling for a single-site business.
RatingLeader is the cheapest provider on this list with a working replacement policy, making it a reasonable entry point for businesses testing the concept before committing to a bigger spend.
What Users Say
Clients using RatingLeader generally describe it as “does the job” rather than impressive. A recurring comment is that review text can feel generic compared to paid providers higher up this list.
Pros
Cons
Pricing: From $8 for one review, $58 for ten reviews, $349 for 100 reviews.
Verdict: A reasonable low-cost starting point, but I’d upgrade to ReviewGrow or BoostMe once budget allows.
ReviewFame is a bare-bones option best suited to businesses that just need a handful of reviews delivered quickly without much configuration.
What Users Say
The most common feedback I’ve come across is that ReviewFame is fine for very small orders but feels risky at scale, since delivery isn’t paced the way the higher-ranked providers pace theirs.
Pros
Cons
Pricing: From $25.
Verdict: Only recommended for very small, occasional top-ups rather than a core reputation strategy.
I ranked these five providers using the same criteria I apply for every client recommendation: how natural the reviews read, how the delivery is paced, whether a replacement guarantee exists, how responsive support is when something goes wrong, and how the pricing compares at similar order sizes. I placed the most weight on delivery pacing and review authenticity, since those two factors matter most for protecting a Google Business Profile long term.
Why Australian Businesses Buy Google Reviews
Before I get into the rankings, it’s worth understanding why so many local businesses go down this path in the first place. In my experience working with tradies, clinics and hospitality clients, it almost always comes down to one of these five reasons.
New Google Business Profiles with no reviews get skipped over, even when the business itself is excellent. A handful of reviews gives potential customers a reason to trust you enough to call.
If every competitor on the map pack has 80+ reviews and you have 4, the star rating alone is costing you clicks. Buying an initial batch closes that visible gap while your organic review flow catches up.
A run of bad luck, one angry customer, or a slow first year can leave a rating sitting below 4.0. A managed batch of positive reviews rebalances the average faster than waiting on organic reviews alone.
Asking every customer for a review, following up, and hoping they follow through is a part-time job. Paid providers remove that admin burden entirely.
Review count and velocity are ranking signals Google’s local algorithm weighs directly. More recent reviews, delivered at a natural pace, correlate with better map pack visibility in my own client data.
Reviews arriving in a slow, natural pattern are far less likely to trigger Google’s spam detection than a batch of ten reviews posted in one hour.
Reviews get removed. A provider that replaces them for free within a set window is protecting your investment, not just making a sale.
Reviews that reference Australian suburbs, spelling and phrasing read more credibly than generic templated text.
Watch for providers that hide per-review cost behind vague “packages” with no visible breakdown.
You want a provider you can actually reach if a review disappears or an order stalls.
I’d be doing you a disservice if I didn’t say this plainly: buying Google reviews goes against Google’s Business Profile content policies, which prohibit reviews that don’t reflect a genuine customer experience. Google actively runs detection systems that identify unusual review patterns, and profiles that lean too heavily on purchased reviews can have those reviews removed, or in more serious cases, face a profile suspension.
That’s the real trade-off every business needs to weigh, not just the price difference between providers. In my experience, the businesses that get the best long-term results use paid reviews as a short-term boost rather than a permanent strategy, and pair them with a genuine review-request process for real customers.
If you decide to go ahead, the providers ranked highest in this guide are the ones that take pacing and realism seriously, which reduces risk. It does not eliminate it.
BoostMe for fast turnaround before a seasonal marketing push, ReviewGrow if you have a few weeks to build reviews more gradually.
ReviewGrow. Healthcare profiles get more scrutiny, so natural pacing and realistic wording matter most here.
ReviewGrow, for the same reasons as healthcare. Professional credibility depends on reviews that read as genuine.
BoostMe works well given how frequently hospitality businesses need quick rating recovery after a bad week.
Trustlyr, purely for the multi-location order splitting.
Trustlyr first, ReviewGrow second if per-location budget allows the higher price point.
After testing all five, ReviewGrow is my top overall recommendation for Australian businesses. It has the most natural-reading reviews, the strongest replacement guarantee, and support that actually responds when something needs fixing. BoostMe is the right call when speed matters more than anything else. Trustlyr earns its place for multi-location accounts specifically. RatingLeader is a reasonable low-budget starting point, and ReviewFame is best reserved for small, occasional top-ups rather than a core strategy.
Based on my testing, ReviewGrow is the strongest overall option for Australian businesses, thanks to natural-reading reviews, drip-feed delivery and a solid replacement guarantee. BoostMe is the better choice when speed matters most.
There’s always some risk, since buying reviews breaches Google’s content policies. Choosing a provider with slow, realistic delivery pacing and a replacement guarantee reduces that risk but doesn’t remove it entirely.
Yes. Google’s Business Profile policies require reviews to reflect genuine customer experiences, and purchased reviews don’t meet that standard, even when they read convincingly.
Pricing generally starts around $25 to $30 for a small batch and scales up based on volume, delivery speed and customisation. Premium providers like ReviewGrow charge more per review in exchange for higher quality and safer pacing.
This depends on the provider and how the order is paced. Fast providers like BoostMe or ReviewFame can complete an order in one to two days, while drip-feed providers like ReviewGrow space delivery over one to two weeks for a more natural pattern.
Yes. Google runs automated systems that flag unusual review patterns, and individual reviews or entire batches can be removed. This is why delivery pacing and review realism matter more than price alone.
Buying reviews adds reviews directly to your profile through a third-party provider. Review management software instead helps you collect genuine reviews from real customers through automated SMS and email requests, which carries no policy risk.
Trustlyr is built specifically for splitting orders across multiple Google Business Profiles, which makes it the most practical option for franchises and multi-clinic operators.
This varies by provider and isn’t something I can independently verify for every order. Providers ranked higher in this guide, particularly ReviewGrow, use geo-targeted profiles and locally worded content designed to read as genuine, though buyers should treat any provider’s authenticity claims as marketing rather than a guarantee.
A suspended profile becomes invisible in Google Search and Maps until it’s restored, which can take days or weeks through Google’s appeal process. This is the most serious downside risk of buying reviews and worth weighing seriously before ordering a large batch.
Send a direct review link by SMS or email right after a purchase or appointment, ask every customer rather than only the happiest ones, and reply promptly to existing reviews. Consistency matters more than any single tactic.
RatingLeader offers the lowest entry price among providers that still include a replacement guarantee, making it a reasonable starting point for businesses testing the concept before scaling up.
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