Meta Description
Google AdSense rejected your Blogger site due to low value content? Learn the real reasons behind this rejection and how beginners can fix it step by step.
Introduction
One of the most discouraging moments for new bloggers is seeing this message from Google AdSense:
“Your site does not comply with our program policies – Low value content.”
This rejection is extremely common, especially for Blogger websites. Many beginners think their content is good, original, and helpful, yet AdSense still rejects the site.
The truth is:
👉 “Low value content” does not always mean bad writing.
👉 It usually means Google does not see enough usefulness yet.
In this article, you will learn:
What “low value content” really means
Why Blogger sites get rejected more often
The exact fixes that actually work
What to do before reapplying
When my own Blogger site was rejected for “low value content”, I had more than 20 articles published and everything looked correct. Still, AdSense rejected it. That experience helped me understand that Google reviews usefulness, clarity, and intent — not just word count or originality. This article is based on that real experience.
What Does “Low Value Content” Mean in AdSense?
Google uses this term when your website does not yet provide clear, sufficient value to users.
It does NOT necessarily mean:
Copied content
Spam content
Policy violation
Instead, it usually means:
The site is too thin
The purpose is unclear
Content looks generic
Not enough depth
Why Blogger Sites Get This Rejection More Often
Blogger itself is not the problem. The problem is how beginners usually use it. Many beginners also face blogger layout and navigation problems, especially when the header or menu does not show properly on mobile devices.
In many cases, Blogger sites look incomplete to AdSense reviewers even when the content is original. This usually happens because the site does not clearly communicate its purpose or target audience yet.
Common Blogger-specific issues:
Very few posts (3–5 articles only)
Short articles (300–600 words)
Generic topics already covered by big sites
No clear niche or purpose
Weak About or Contact pages
Google wants to see that your site is useful enough to show ads on.
If you want to understand how Google evaluates Blogger sites for trust and usefulness, our Blogger and SEO beginner guides explain these signals clearly.
Real Reasons AdSense Rejects Blogger Sites for Low Value Content
1. Content Is Too Generic
Articles like:
“How to make money online”
“What is blogging”
“Top SEO tips”
These topics are:
Overwritten
Highly competitive
Dominated by authority sites
Google does not need another copy of the same information.
2. Not Enough Content Depth
Many beginner articles:
Answer the question briefly
Do not explain “why” or “how”
Lack step-by-step guidance
Google prefers complete answers, not surface-level explanations.
3. Unclear Website Purpose
If Google cannot understand:
Who the site is for
What problem it solves
It assumes the site exists only to show ads, which leads to rejection.
4. Weak or Missing Pages
Even if you have content, missing basic pages can cause rejection.
Required pages:
About
Contact
Privacy Policy
Without these, Google cannot trust the site.
How to Fix Low Value Content Rejection on Blogger (Step by Step)
Step 1: Increase Content Quality, Not Just Quantity
Before reapplying:
Publish 8–12 solid articles
Each article should be 900–1200 words
Focus on one specific problem per article
Example:
Instead of “AdSense approval tips”
Write: “Why AdSense keeps rejecting Blogger sites even with original content”
Step 2: Solve Real Beginner Problems
Low-competition content comes from real confusion, not trends.
Good topics:
Blogger layout issues
AdSense errors and messages
Google Search Console problems
Mobile vs desktop issues
Beginner mistakes
These are searched by real users and ignored by big sites.
After improving article depth and focusing on one clear niche, the overall quality signal of the site improved. This change mattered more than adding many short posts.
Step 3: Improve Your About Page
Your About page should clearly explain:
What the site is about
Who it helps
Why it exists
Avoid:
Short, vague descriptions
Copy-paste templates
Write in simple, honest language.
Step 4: Add a Proper Privacy Policy
A Privacy Policy is mandatory for AdSense.
It should mention:
Google AdSense
Cookies
Third-party vendors
This page builds trust and compliance.
Step 5: Do Not Reapply Too Quickly
Reapplying without changes almost always leads to rejection again.
Best practice:
Wait 2–4 weeks
Improve content during this time
Make visible changes
Google checks improvement, not desperation.
Does Design or Theme Cause Low Value Content Rejection?
No.
Theme choice does NOT cause low value content rejection as long as:
The site is readable
Pages load properly
Content is accessible
Content quality always matters more than design.
Common Myths About AdSense Rejection
❌ “Blogger sites are not accepted anymore”
❌ “You need a custom domain”
❌ “You must have thousands of visitors”
❌ “AdSense hates new websites”
All of these are false.
Many simple Blogger sites get approved once they fix content value.
When Should You Reapply for AdSense?
You should reapply only when:
You have enough content
Each article solves a clear problem
Required pages are complete
Your site looks active and useful
If you are confident a human reviewer can understand your site’s purpose, you are ready.
Final Conclusion
“Low value content” is not an insult from Google. It is feedback.
It means:
Your site has potential
But it needs more clarity and usefulness
By focusing on real problems, clear explanations, and complete content, even a small Blogger site can get AdSense approval.
Do not rush. Improve first. Then apply.
AdSense approval is not about tricks or shortcuts. It is about whether a real human reviewer can immediately understand your site’s purpose and usefulness. Once that clarity exists, approval becomes much easier — even on Blogger.

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