About Us

We help dentists protect what they've built.

Removed Reviews was founded by attorneys and reputation specialists who saw how devastating negative reviews can be for dental practices — and how few ethical, effective options existed to fight back. Today we focus exclusively on dental professionals. We combine deep knowledge of platform policies, legal strategy, and the unique patient dynamics of dentistry to deliver results that matter.

Ethical. Effective. Dentist-focused.

Ethical

We never write, buy, or post fake reviews. Every removal request is grounded in published platform policy and documented evidence — nothing more.

Effective

We only take cases we believe qualify for removal. If your review doesn't fit one of the 12 removable categories, we tell you directly and don't waste your time or money.

Dentist-Focused

We work exclusively with dental practices. That focus means we understand Google the way your office manager understands your scheduling system — deeply and practically.

"The system was developed by two California attorneys with over 25 years of combined experience who are surrounded by dental clients with reputation issues. We built this service after watching too many dental practices pay attorneys and reputation companies that don't understand platform policy — and defamation lawyers who charge $25,000 to remove a review that violated Google policy from the moment it was posted.

The gap between clicking 'flag as inappropriate' and filing a defamation lawsuit is enormous. That's where we live. Every removal request we file cites the specific platform policy the review violates — built and documented with the precision of a legal argument, even when the case never goes near a courtroom."

Ravash Raymond Ram & Sarah S. Gabai

Co-Founders of Removed Reviews & CA Practicing Attorneys

Important: Removed Reviews is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice or legal services. Both founders are licensed California attorneys who designed the service, but engaging Removed Reviews does not create an attorney-client relationship. When a client's matter requires actual legal services — such as a defamation lawsuit or formal demand letter — those services are provided separately under a separate written engagement.

Ready to discuss your practice's situation?