If your business has more than one real-world location, you can add each one to Google Business Profile so customers can find the right office, store, or service area on Google Search and Google Maps.
The important part is this: each location needs to be a legitimate, eligible business presence. If you try to add extra “locations” that are really just cities you want to rank in, Google may reject, suspend, or disable the profile.
You can usually add another location if that place is a real business location that either:
If you are a service-area business, Google lets you set service areas, but that is not the same thing as creating separate listings for every town you serve.
If Google already has a profile for that location, you may need to request ownership instead of creating a new one.
If your business travels to customers, such as a plumber, landscaper, cleaning company, or electrician, do not create a separate Google Business Profile for every city you work in.
Instead:
Google allows service-area businesses to define the areas they serve, but the profile still needs to be tied to one real business operation, not a list of target cities.
Google’s official service-area help page is here: Manage service areas for your business.
Google does not approve locations just because a business wants more map visibility. The listing needs to match how the business exists in the real world. These steps can help:
Do not add city names, keywords, or services to the business name unless they are part of the real-world branding. For example, avoid names like “Smith Plumbing Madison Emergency Water Heater Repair” unless that is actually your legal or customer-facing name.
If customers can visit the location, use the actual staffed address. Do not use P.O. boxes, virtual offices, UPS stores, mailboxes, or addresses where your business is not genuinely operating.
For a storefront or office listing, Google wants the location to be staffed during the hours shown on the profile and able to receive customers.
Make sure your business name, address, phone number, website, and hours match what appears on your website and other major listings as closely as possible.
This is not a formal Google requirement, but it helps support legitimacy. Each location should ideally have its own page with:
Google may ask you to verify with a live video call or a video recording. Be ready to show:
Before adding a location, search Google Maps to make sure there is not already a profile for it. If there is, claim or request access to the existing listing instead of making a second one.
If your company has 10 or more eligible locations under the same brand, Google provides bulk management options through Business Profile Manager.
That can make it easier to add, organize, and verify multiple locations at scale using a spreadsheet.
Useful Google pages:
If Google flags the new location as a duplicate, do not keep submitting the same listing over and over. First, check whether:
Google’s help page for this is here: Resolve duplicate profiles and ownership issues.
Getting approved is one thing. Showing up well in local search is another.
Once the location is live:
Google explains that local visibility is influenced mainly by relevance, distance, and prominence, so accuracy and completeness matter.
Google’s page on this is here: Tips to improve your local ranking on Google.
If you are tempted to create extra profiles just to rank in nearby towns, stop there. That is one of the quickest ways to run into verification problems or suspensions.
A better plan is to:
That approach is slower than trying to game the system, but it is much safer and much more likely to hold up.
