EPISODE · Jun 26, 2026 · 0 MIN
Facebook Dropshipping Ban: Causes and Solutions
from AGrowth Agency · host AGrowth Agency
Facebook Dropshipping Ban: Causes and SolutionsFacebook dropshipping ban is not caused by the business model alone. In most cases, Meta restricts ads because the customer journey shows risk signals: unclear shipping, weak refund policy, copied creatives, exaggerated claims, or buyer complaints.For advertisers, the question is not “Can I run dropshipping ads on Facebook?” but “Does my store look reliable to Meta and customers?” A safer setup connects each touchpoint: ad creative, product page, checkout, tracking update, and support.One benchmark is the Page Feedback Score. When buyers report late delivery, poor quality, or products that do not match the ad, delivery can become expensive or limited. If the score drops too low, the account may face restrictions. That is why advertisers control expectations.The solution is operational. Show delivery windows, publish shipping and refund policies, use a branded domain, add contact information, and avoid generic policy pages. Creatives should be original or licensed. Product claims must match the landing page. If shipping takes 10–20 business days, say it before purchase and repeat it in emails.Ad behavior matters. Avoid sudden budget jumps, duplicated campaigns, or testing on new accounts. Build spend history gradually, safely.Facebook does not ban quality dropshipping by default. It restricts risky experiences. Stores that survive treat compliance, support, and transparency as part of growth.Read more: https://agrowth.io/blogs/facebook-ads/facebook-dropshipping-ban
What this episode covers
Facebook Dropshipping Ban: Causes and SolutionsFacebook dropshipping ban is not caused by the business model alone. In most cases, Meta restricts ads because the customer journey shows risk signals: unclear shipping, weak refund policy, copied creatives, exaggerated claims, or buyer complaints.For advertisers, the question is not “Can I run dropshipping ads on Facebook?” but “Does my store look reliable to Meta and customers?” A safer setup connects each touchpoint: ad creative, product page, checkout, tracking update, and support.One benchmark is the Page Feedback Score. When buyers report late delivery, poor quality, or products that do not match the ad, delivery can become expensive or limited. If the score drops too low, the account may face restrictions. That is why advertisers control expectations.The solution is operational. Show delivery windows, publish shipping and refund policies, use a branded domain, add contact information, and avoid generic policy pages. Creatives should be original or licensed. Product claims must match the landing page. If shipping takes 10–20 business days, say it before purchase and repeat it in emails.Ad behavior matters. Avoid sudden budget jumps, duplicated campaigns, or testing on new accounts. Build spend history gradually, safely.Facebook does not ban quality dropshipping by default. It restricts risky experiences. Stores that survive treat compliance, support, and transparency as part of growth.Read more: https://agrowth.io/blogs/facebook-ads/facebook-dropshipping-ban
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Facebook Dropshipping Ban: Causes and Solutions
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