Notification

Users can now migrate Google Podcasts subscriptions to YouTube Music or to another app that supports OPML import. Learn more here

Resolve Google Search’s "Unusual traffic from your computer network" message

If a network you use, including VPN networks, seems to be sending automated traffic to Google Search, you might get the message “Our systems have detected unusual traffic from your computer network.”

What to do when you get this message

The message most likely shows a reCAPTCHA. To confirm that you’re a person and not a robot, solve the reCAPTCHA. After you solve it, the message goes away, and you can use Google again.

If you don't get a reCAPTCHA, check if:

Learn how to solve a reCAPTCHA.

What to do if you continue to get the message

Here's what you can do if you continue to get the "Unusual traffic from your computer network" message:

  • Learn how to detect and remove malware.
    • You or another user on your network might have malware, which is malicious software that can be installed on your computer without your knowledge. Some malware can cause Google to show this message.
  • Contact your network administrator or IT professional to help you locate the source and stop the problem.
    • You could get this message if others that use the same network you use, like at a school or business, are sending automated searches to Google.
  • Uninstall the VPN from your computer or network, or contact your VPN provider.
    • You could get this message if others that use the same Virtual Private Network (VPN) you use are sending automated searches to Google.
    • This can also happen with IPv6 tunnel services.
    • Some VPNs and tunnel services cause all traffic to be blocked because they make it impossible for Google to tell the difference between abusive and non-abusive traffic.
  • Contact your internet provider about the error.
    • You could get this message if others that use the same internet provider you use are sending automated searches to Google.

What to do if you’re a network administrator or provider

If you administer a network or are an internet service or VPN provider, locate the sources of automated traffic to Google and block them. Once the automated searches have stopped, your users should be able to search normally on Google.

Network administrators or others should thoroughly review before they buy IP space from an IP broker. If possible, ask to test the network first to make sure it can access major websites and doesn’t have any existing blocks on it.

What Google considers automated traffic

  • Searches sent from these sources:
    • Robots
    • Computer programs
    • Automated services
    • Search scrapers
  • Use of software that sends searches to Google to find how a website or web page ranks on Google

Was this helpful?

How can we improve it?
false
Search
Clear search
Close search
Google apps
Main menu
13521819800437740040
true
Search Help Center
true
true
true
true
true
100334
false
false