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    Reputation8 min24 March 2026

    What to Do When Someone Threatens You With a Bad Review

    A customer threatens with a 1-star review if you don't pay or provide free services. This is review blackmail. Learn how to handle it without damaging your reputation.

    Table of Contents

    1. 1Introduction
    2. 2What exactly is review blackmail?
    3. 3Why you should never give in to blackmail
    4. 4What to do: step-by-step plan
    5. 5Your legal rights worldwide
    6. 6How to structurally protect your business
    7. 7Frequently asked questions
    1

    Introduction

    It happens more often than you think. A customer says: 'If I don't get a discount, I'll post a bad review.' Or a former employee threatens to destroy your online reputation. This is review blackmail, and it affects business owners in every sector. In this article you'll learn how to handle it, what your rights are, and how to protect your business.

    2

    What exactly is review blackmail?

    Review blackmail is any situation where someone threatens a negative review to achieve something: a discount, free products, a refund without reason, or simply to cause harm. It differs from an unhappy customer sharing an honest negative experience. With blackmail, the threat is the means, not the review itself.

    • 'I'll post a 1-star review if I don't get my money back' (while the service was correctly delivered)
    • 'I'll post negative reviews on all your platforms if you don't give me a discount'
    • Ex-employees threatening with multiple fake reviews
    • Customers threatening to mobilise friends and family for mass negative reviews
    3

    Why you should never give in to blackmail

    It's tempting to give in. Offering a discount seems like a quick fix. But giving in to blackmail creates a pattern. Other customers discover that threats work and you become more vulnerable. Moreover, you have no guarantee the blackmailer won't still post a review after payment.

    4

    What to do: step-by-step plan

    Follow these steps when dealing with review blackmail.

    • Step 1: Save all communication. Screenshots of messages, emails, WhatsApp conversations. This is your evidence
    • Step 2: Respond in writing, not by phone. Write something like: 'We take every complaint seriously. We're happy to discuss your experience, but we will not respond to threats'
    • Step 3: If the threat comes via WhatsApp or email, save it completely including timestamps and sender
    • Step 4: If the negative review is posted anyway, report it to Google as 'blackmail' via the reporting form. Attach your evidence
    • Step 5: Respond professionally and briefly to the review. Don't mention it's blackmail. Write something like: 'We recognise this situation and have tried to resolve it personally'
    • Step 6: In serious cases, consider filing a police report. Review blackmail can fall under extortion
    5

    Your legal rights worldwide

    In both worldwide, review blackmail may fall under extortion or threatening behaviour. This is punishable. In practice, filing a report is difficult because the threshold is high. However, it's important to document everything. If you hire a lawyer, a formal cease-and-desist letter can be enough to deter the blackmailer.

    6

    How to structurally protect your business

    The best protection against review blackmail is a strong online reputation. If you have 200 positive reviews, one blackmail review barely makes a difference. RecensioAI helps you continuously collect real reviews. The review filter catches unhappy customers before they react publicly.

    • Build a constant stream of real, recent reviews with RecensioAI
    • Use the review filter to catch unhappy customers privately
    • Monitor your reviews daily so you can respond to threats immediately
    • Always document everything, even if you think it won't lead anywhere
    7

    Frequently asked questions

    Frequently asked questions about review blackmail and threats.

    • **Should I involve the police?** For serious threats or repeated behaviour: yes. Save all communication as evidence. For one-time threats, a formal response is often enough
    • **Does Google remove reviews posted through blackmail?** Google can remove reviews that violate their guidelines, including blackmail-related reviews. Evidence is crucial
    • **Should I respond to a blackmail review?** Yes, always. Respond briefly and professionally. Potential customers read your response and judge your professionalism
    • **Can I prevent someone from posting a review?** No, anyone with a Google account can post a review. But with RecensioAI you catch unhappy customers privately before they react publicly

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