FeedRescue AIFeedRescueAIMerchant Center repair
Critical

Fix policy-risk product titles in Shopify

Detect risky promotional or unsupported title language in Shopify feeds and create safer title suggestions without approving restricted products.

Quick answer

Fix policy-risk product titles in Shopify.

Fix policy-risk product titles in Shopify for Google Shopping. The safest path is to identify affected Shopify products, confirm the factual source of the missing or conflicting data, and repair the Merchant Center feed through a non-destructive layer before considering direct catalog edits.

Check your feed for this issue
01

What does this issue mean?

Policy-risk language can trigger product review, limited visibility, or account-level friction. In FeedRescue, this maps to FDR-038: Policy-risk terms in title/description. Detection source: Rule dictionary + AI.

02

Why it happens

  • Titles include unsupported claims, urgency language, or promotional phrases
  • Descriptions were copied from ad creative
  • Old SEO rewrites conflict with Merchant Center policies
03

Why it affects performance

Google may trust the product record less, which can delay approvals, reduce matching confidence, and limit Shopping visibility until the catalog facts and storefront evidence agree.

Safe repair plan

How to fix policy-risk product titles in Shopify for Google Shopping

Start with verification, keep edits reversible, and only apply fixes when the product facts are already present.

1Open affected policy-risk terms in title/description examples in Shopify

Open affected policy-risk terms in title/description examples in Shopify

2Compare product title and description against Google product data requirements

Compare product title and description against Google product data requirements

3Look for unsupported claims or restricted terms

Look for unsupported claims or restricted terms

4Check whether the product category has stricter policy expectations

Check whether the product category has stricter policy expectations

5Suggest safer copy from factual product fields

Suggest safer copy from factual product fields

6Require review before changing sensitive text

Require review before changing sensitive text

Manual fixing works for small catalogs, but it becomes painful when hundreds of variants are affected or when the feed app keeps overwriting values.

Automatic detection

Find affected products automatically

FeedRescue evaluates deterministic rules first, assigns the issue to FDR-038, and then uses constrained enrichment only when it can explain or extract from existing product facts. The scanner preserves Shopify as the catalog source of truth and keeps Merchant Center diagnostics tied to product and variant examples.

  • Rule dictionary scan
  • Review-only suggestions
  • No compliance invention

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Do not invent missing product identifiers or factual product attributes.
  • Do not apply the same value across unrelated products.
  • Do not rely only on a Merchant Center summary count; check actual affected products.
  • Do not overwrite Shopify catalog fields when a supplemental feed or app-owned metafield is safer.

Prevention checklist

  • Product facts are present in Shopify.
  • Feed data matches the landing page.
  • Variants have clean identifiers.
  • Availability and price match your storefront.
  • Feed app mappings are not overwriting fixes.
  • Merchant action items are separated from autofixable issues.

Frequently asked questions

How long does Google take to update after fixing Policy-risk terms in title/description?

Many feed corrections need a resync and then Merchant Center processing time. FeedRescue tracks status so you can see whether the repair has been submitted and rechecked.

Can FeedRescue fix Policy-risk terms in title/description automatically?

Only when the required facts already exist and the issue is safe to repair non-destructively. Merchant-input issues stay review-only.

Will this change my Shopify catalog?

The default repair path uses supplemental feeds or app-owned metafields before direct catalog mutation.

How does FeedRescue decide what to fix?

Deterministic rules and merchant-visible evidence decide the repair path before any constrained AI explanation is used.

Check your feed before issues cost you sales

Run a free Shopify scan to find storefront risk signals, affected products, and priority fixes. Connect Google after install for exact Merchant Center diagnostics.

No signup requiredTakes under a minute

Manual diagnosis notes

The longer version, for teams checking this by hand

Use this section when you need to brief a merchant, developer, or feed manager before changing data. The goal is to verify the product facts first, then choose the least invasive repair path.

What to confirm first

Policy-risk language can trigger product review, limited visibility, or account-level friction. In FeedRescue, this maps to FDR-038: Policy-risk terms in title/description. Detection source: Rule dictionary + AI.

For Shopify stores, the important distinction is whether the issue comes from the catalog record, the storefront page, theme structured data, a feed app cache, or Merchant Center processing. Treat those as separate evidence sources instead of assuming the newest value in one system is correct.

How to verify the source

  1. Compare product title and description against Google product data requirements
  2. Look for unsupported claims or restricted terms
  3. Check whether the product category has stricter policy expectations

Keep product handles, variant IDs, timestamps, and the observed Merchant Center state together. That makes the repair traceable and prevents the same issue from reappearing after the next feed sync.

Safe repair path

FeedRescue should repair this kind of issue through deterministic checks first. AI can help explain or summarize evidence, but it should not become the source of truth for product identifiers, prices, inventory, compliance data, or shipping facts.

  • Suggest safer copy from factual product fields
  • Require review before changing sensitive text
  • Never claim a product is approved or compliant without evidence