What Google Changed
In March 2024, Google rolled out a major update targeting what it called site reputation abuse — a polite term for the parasite SEO industry that had exploded over the prior two years. The update was tightened significantly in 2025 and 2026, with each core update applying the rules more aggressively.
The policy targets three specific behaviours:
Site Reputation Abuse
Third-party pages hosted on a legitimate domain to exploit its ranking authority. Example: a coupon site section on a news site, or a "reviews" subdomain pointing to affiliate spam.
Scaled Content Abuse
Mass-producing low-quality content at scale — whether AI-generated or outsourced — with no original value. Affects sites using automated content farms hosted on shared IPs.
Expired Domain Abuse
Buying expired domains with existing authority and repurposing them to rank spammy content. These sites frequently cluster on cheap shared hosting IP blocks.
Source: Google Search Essentials — Spam Policies
Here's the problem: the enforcement is infrastructure-level, not just domain-level.Google's spam systems flag IP ranges, hosting blocks, and ASNs associated with high concentrations of policy violations. If your site sits on a shared hosting IP block with dozens of spammy neighbours, the collateral damage is real.
Estimated percentage of cheap shared hosting IP blocks appearing on at least one major spam blacklist in 2026.
Sites on flagged shared IP ranges can see Googlebot crawl frequency drop by up to 4x compared to clean IPs.
The typical time between a neighbour account being flagged and measurable ranking impact on co-hosted sites.
“Most small business owners don't realise their SEO can be damaged by something completely outside their control. Shared hosting puts your domain's reputation at the mercy of hundreds of strangers. Google's 2024 spam policies made this risk concrete — and measurable. Any site generating revenue needs either a dedicated IP or Cloudflare in front of it. There's no excuse not to in 2026.”
Digital Marketing Expert & SEO Consultant
The IP Reputation Problem
On shared hosting, hundreds of websites share the same IP address. This is completely normal and not inherently bad. The issue is what happens when even a small percentage of those sites get flagged.
Google, spam blacklists (Spamhaus, SORBS, Barracuda), and email providers all maintain reputation scores for IP addresses and IP blocks (subnets). When abuse is detected from an IP, the entire subnet — often a /24 block containing 254 addresses — takes a reputation hit.
You don't control who your neighbours are
On shared hosting, the hosting company provisions accounts automatically. A spammer can sign up for a $2/month plan, get assigned your IP block, and within 48 hours your site is sharing an IP with an active spam operation — with zero notification to you.
How IP Reputation Affects Your Rankings
Reverse Proxy Abuse Explained
Reverse proxy abuse is a more technical version of the same problem — and it's become far more common since 2024. Here's how it works:
A bad actor rents a cheap shared hosting account or compromises an existing one on your IP block.
They configure a reverse proxy that routes traffic from spam domains through the legitimate shared hosting IP.
Google and spam filters see spam traffic originating from your IP address — not the actual spam domain.
Your IP is associated with spam activity. The entire /24 subnet takes a trust penalty.
Your site — which did nothing wrong — sees crawl drops, ranking losses, and potentially manual review flags.
The worst part: Reverse proxy abuse is nearly invisible to site owners. There are no error messages, no alerts, and no obvious signs until your rankings start dropping and you start investigating why.
Who Is Most at Risk?
Budget shared hosting
High RiskHosts with very low prices attract a higher proportion of spammers. Higher account density on each IP block means more risk.
Hosting with no account isolation
High RiskProviders that don't monitor or isolate accounts allow abuse to continue longer before detection — maximising collateral damage.
Sites on popular hosting platforms
Medium RiskHigh-volume hosts mean more shared IP neighbours per account. More neighbours = more exposure to any individual bad actor.
New sites on shared IP blocks
Medium RiskNewer domains have less established trust. IP reputation issues hit newer sites harder and take longer to recover from.
Are You Affected?
Run these checks in order. Start with the free tools — most people find the answer in the first two steps.
Step 1 — Find Your Server IP
# Find your site's server IP nslookup yourdomain.com # or dig +short yourdomain.com # Example output: 185.234.xx.xx # This is the IP you'll check against blacklists
Step 2 — Run a Blacklist Check
Go to MXToolbox Blacklist Check and enter your IP address. It checks against 100+ blacklists simultaneously in under 30 seconds — free, no sign-up required.
Spamhaus ZEN
The most impactful blacklist. A listing here affects email delivery and is a strong Google trust signal. Check: spamhaus.org/lookup
Barracuda BRBL
Widely used by email providers and increasingly referenced by content spam filters.
SORBS
Spam and Open Relay Blocking System — if your IP appears here, email is almost certainly being blocked.
URIBL / SURBL
URL-based blacklists that directly affect Google's spam scoring for domains hosted on flagged IPs.
Step 3 — Check Google Search Console
If Google has flagged your site, follow the steps in the official Manual Actions guide to submit a reconsideration request once the issue is resolved.
How to Protect Yourself
You don't need to move to a VPS immediately. These steps — most of which are free or low-cost — significantly reduce your exposure while you're on shared hosting.
Put Cloudflare in front of your site (Free)
- 1Sign up at cloudflare.com — the free plan is sufficient for this purpose
- 2Add your domain and update your nameservers to Cloudflare's
- 3Enable "Proxy" (orange cloud) for your A records
- 4Cloudflare's IP now shows to Google — not your shared hosting IP
- 5Your shared hosting IP becomes invisible to public DNS lookups
Request a dedicated IP from your host
- 1Contact your hosting provider and ask for a dedicated IP address
- 2This separates your site from the shared IP pool entirely
- 3Your IP reputation becomes yours alone to maintain
- 4Typically costs $2–5/month extra — worth it for any business site
Set up IP reputation monitoring
- 1Create a free account at hetrixtools.com or mxtoolbox.com
- 2Add your IP to their blacklist monitoring — get alerted within minutes of any listing
- 3Set up weekly automated reports so you catch issues before they compound
Harden your site against being used as a proxy
- 1Keep WordPress, plugins, and themes fully updated — compromised sites are the most common abuse vector
- 2Enable a Web Application Firewall (WAF) — Cloudflare free tier includes one
- 3Disable XML-RPC if you don't use it: it's a common entry point for reverse proxy abuse
- 4Scan your site monthly at sucuri.net/website-malware-scanner
Cloudflare is your fastest fix
Enabling Cloudflare proxy takes about 15 minutes and immediately masks your shared hosting IP from public DNS. Google crawls your Cloudflare IP, not your server IP. This single step eliminates the neighbour IP reputation problem entirely — for free. How Cloudflare proxy works
When to Switch to VPS
Cloudflare and a dedicated IP solve the IP reputation problem for most sites. But if any of these apply to you, it's time to move to a VPS:
| Factor | Shared Hosting | VPS / Cloud |
|---|---|---|
| IP control | Shared with hundreds of sites | Your IP — no neighbours |
| Blacklist risk | High — one bad actor affects all | None from neighbours |
| Google crawl trust | Medium — shared signal | High — clean dedicated IP |
| Email deliverability | Depends on shared IP reputation | Your reputation alone |
| Recovery if flagged | Slow — needs host intervention | Fast — fully in your control |
| Cost | From ~$3/month | From ~$10/month |
Ready to move off shared hosting?
MevoHost VPS plans start at $10/month — dedicated IP, clean block, full isolation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Google penalise my site because of other sites on the same shared IP?
Indirectly, yes. Google doesn't issue manual penalties based solely on shared IPs, but IP reputation affects crawl rates, trust signals, and spam scoring. If your shared IP is flagged for hosting spammy sites or reverse proxy abuse, your site can suffer ranking drops or deindexing — even if your content is completely clean.
What is Google's site reputation abuse policy?
Rolled out in March 2024 and tightened in 2025-2026, it targets sites that host third-party content to exploit the host domain's authority — so-called parasite SEO. On shared hosting, this can affect innocent site owners who share infrastructure with compromised or abusive accounts.
What is reverse proxy abuse in shared hosting?
Bad actors route spammy or malicious traffic through legitimate shared hosting IPs by exploiting misconfigured servers or compromised accounts. Google sees the traffic originating from your IP range and can flag the entire block — harming all legitimate sites sharing those IPs.
Does a dedicated IP address help with SEO?
A dedicated IP isolates your reputation from other hosting accounts. While Google has stated shared vs dedicated IP is not a direct ranking factor, a dedicated IP eliminates collateral damage from bad neighbours, prevents your IP from appearing on spam blacklists you didn't cause, and significantly improves email deliverability.
How do I check if my hosting IP is on a spam blacklist?
Use MXToolbox Blacklist Check (mxtoolbox.com/blacklists.aspx) — enter your IP and it checks against 100+ blacklists in seconds. Also check Google Search Console for Manual Actions. Spamhaus ZEN, SORBS, and Barracuda are the most impactful blacklists to watch specifically.
About the Author
Sarah Kim
SEO & Security Specialist, MevoHost
Sarah has 8+ years of experience in technical SEO and hosting infrastructure security. She has monitored the impact of every major Google spam update since 2018, analysed IP reputation data across thousands of hosting accounts, and authored MevoHost's internal guidelines on spam policy compliance. She tracks Google Search Central announcements, Spamhaus threat intelligence, and shared hosting abuse patterns daily.