Online reviews are no longer just “nice to have” for doctors; they shape how patients choose care.
When people search for a doctor today, they are not just checking credentials or location. They are reading real patient experiences.
A few honest sentences on platforms like Google Business Profile, Healthgrades, Yelp, or Zocdoc often carry more influence than any marketing message.
This is where many practices struggle.
Online reviews for doctors are patient-generated ratings and feedback shared across these platforms. They play a critical role in shaping patient trust and improving local search visibility.
So, how can doctors get more online reviews?
Doctors can increase online reviews by asking patients at the right time, sending thoughtful follow-ups, making the review process quick and easy, and actively managing their online reputation.
The most effective approach combines all of these methods with privacy-conscious practices and a well-trained team.
This guide walks you through the full process, from setting up and optimizing your profiles to requesting reviews, responding professionally, tracking performance, and implementing 12 proven ways to generate more online reviews.
Whether you run a solo practice or a multi-provider clinic, these strategies will help you build a strong online review presence that attracts new patients and improves your local rankings.
Why Are Online Reviews Important for Doctors and Medical Practices?
Online reviews are important for doctors and medical practices because they are the first thing patients look at when picking a doctor. Over 70% of patients read doctor reviews and check star ratings before booking a visit. That number keeps rising.
Patient reviews shape where your practice shows up in local search results. Google ranks practices higher when they have more reviews, better ratings, and recent activity. This matters most in the Map Pack, the box with three listings that appears at the top of search results.
When most patients search “doctor near me” or “dermatologist in [city],” the Map Pack is where they stop looking. Reviews on Healthgrades, Zocdoc, and Vitals also show up high in search results, giving you more ways to be seen beyond Google alone.
Beyond search rankings, patient feedback builds trust. A practice with 150 recent reviews and a 4.7-star average looks skilled and reliable without saying a word. A practice with 3 reviews from two years ago sends the opposite message.
Review count and freshness also affect how many patients choose you. A patient comparing two doctors with similar skills will almost always pick the one with more positive, recent reviews. Practices that manage their online reputation see real gains in new patient calls, questions, and bookings.
Here is what the gap looks like in practice:
| Factor | Practice With Strong Online Reviews | Practice With Weak or No Reviews |
| Local search visibility | High, appears in Google Map Pack and ranks on Healthgrades | Low, buried in search results |
| Patient trust at first glance | Strong, star ratings and reviews build credibility | Little to no online credibility |
| New patient conversion rate | Much higher | Below average |
| How patients see you | Viewed as a top choice | Easily passed over by patients |
How Do You Set Up and Improve Your Google Business Profile for Online Reviews?
Doctors can improve their Google Business Profile for online reviews by claiming the listing, filling out all profile fields, creating a direct review link, and sharing it at every patient touchpoint.
Start by claiming and verifying your Google Business Profile (GBP) at business.google.com. Google will confirm you own the listing through a postcard, phone call, or email. This usually takes one to two weeks.
Once verified, fill out every field. This includes office hours, services, accepted insurance plans, photos of the office and team, and your areas of focus. Google favors complete profiles in local search rankings. A half-filled profile hurts your ranking and turns away patients looking for doctor reviews.
Next, create your direct review link. Inside the GBP dashboard, go to “Ask for reviews” to find your link. This link takes patients straight to the review form with no extra steps. Shorten it with a URL shortener so it is easy to share.
Share this link everywhere patients interact with your practice: booking confirmation emails, follow-up texts, your website, printed materials, and your email signature.
Turn on messaging and the Q&A feature on your GBP. These tools show Google that patients interact with your listing, which helps your ranking. They also give patients another way to connect before booking.
Finally, show your best patient reviews on your practice website. Placing 4-star and 5-star reviews on your homepage and service pages builds trust and pushes other patients to share their own feedback online.
How Do You Control Your Online Presence Across Review Platforms?
Doctors can control their online presence in review platforms by claiming profiles on every major review site, keeping details the same across all listings, and watching each site for new patient feedback.
Google is the biggest platform for doctor reviews, but patients also check Healthgrades, Vitals, Zocdoc, Yelp, WebMD, and RateMDs. If you only manage your Google reviews, you leave your reputation on other sites unguarded. Outdated info or ignored negative feedback can drive patients away.
Claim your profile on each platform. Make sure your name, address, and phone number (NAP) match exactly across every listing. Even small differences, like “Suite 200” on Google and “Ste. 200” on Healthgrades, can confuse search engines and make it harder for patients to find you.
Keep your specialty info, provider bios, office photos, and insurance lists current across the board. Set a reminder every three months to check all your review site listings.
A tip most doctors miss: Many doctors ignore Yelp because they link it with restaurants. But Yelp ranks high in search results for healthcare searches. A patient searching your name will often see your Yelp listing on page one, even if they never visit Yelp on purpose. An unclaimed Yelp profile with unanswered complaints creates a trust problem you may not even know about.
12 Proven Ways Doctors Can Get More Online Reviews
Here are 12 proven methods that doctors use to get more reviews, improve ratings, and build patient trust.
1. Ask Patients at the Right Moment
Doctors can ask patients for reviews by timing the request right after a good interaction, a compliment, or a resolved concern. Train front desk and medical staff to use friendly, natural language. When a patient says, “Thank you, that was really helpful,” respond with: “I’m glad we could help. If you have a moment, a quick online review helps other patients find us.” Turn every in-person compliment into a review request right away.
2. Send Follow-Up Texts or Emails After Visits
Doctors can get many more online reviews by sending follow-up text or email messages with a one-tap review link after each visit. Use your EHR, patient portal, or tools like Birdeye, Podium, or Curogram to send messages right after checkout. Send within 1 to 24 hours for the best results. Texts work better than email, with open rates topping 90% compared to about 20% for email. Keep the message short: “Thanks for visiting [Practice Name]. Tap here to share your feedback: [link].” No extra clicks. No login needed. Response rates drop fast after 48 hours.
3. Start With Your Most Loyal Patients
Doctors can build early review momentum by reaching out to long-term patients who have not yet left a review. Your current patient base has dozens of happy people who never thought to post feedback. A personal email or in-person ask from their doctor carries real weight. Look for patients who have been with your practice for years, often refer others, or say thank you during visits. These loyal patients write detailed, honest reviews that create a strong base. Start here before moving to automated outreach for newer patients.
4. Use QR Codes and Signs in Your Office
Doctors can capture more online reviews by placing QR codes at checkout counters, waiting areas, and exam rooms. Link them to your Google review page or a page that covers multiple review sites. Print QR codes on table cards, small posters, or receipt inserts. When patients scan the code with their phone, the review form opens right away. Pair each QR code with a short note like “Enjoyed your visit? Scan to share your experience.” This works well for patients who plan to leave feedback but forget once they leave. Setup takes less than an hour.
5. Add Review Links to Emails and Your Website
Doctors can collect more online reviews by adding review links to booking confirmations, follow-up emails, and email signatures. Add a line like “Share your experience with us” with a link to your Google review page or a review landing page in every outgoing message. Create a “Leave a Review” page on your practice website that explains how to do it and links to Google, Healthgrades, and other sites where you want feedback. These touchpoints take little effort and catch patients who just need a handy reminder.
6. Use Patient Surveys as a Review Gateway
Doctors can use post-visit surveys to find happy patients and guide them to leave an online review. Patients who are not happy can be routed to internal feedback channels instead. Send a brief one-to-three-question survey after each visit. Patients who rate highly get a follow-up asking them to share their experience on Google or Healthgrades. Patients who rate poorly get a message asking them to contact the office. Important: Google does not allow review filtering. You cannot block unhappy patients from posting. You can guide happy patients and handle complaints inside your office, but you must never control who gets access to the review link.
7. Make the Review Process Simple
Doctors can get more complete reviews by cutting out extra steps. Use one-tap links, mobile-friendly pages, and clear directions. Every extra click between the request and the form loses patients. Use short URLs or QR codes that open the review form directly. Test links on different devices to make sure they load well. For older patients or those less at ease with tech, make a simple printed guide: open your camera, scan this code, tap the link, pick your star rating, write a few words about your visit. Fewer steps mean more reviews.
8. Train Your Whole Team on Asking for Reviews
Doctors can grow their review count by training all patient-facing staff to ask for feedback in a friendly, natural way. Getting reviews should not depend on one person. When every team member knows how and when to ask, the practice catches many more chances. Hold a short training session with sample scripts and practice scenarios. Make it part of checkout: after scheduling the next visit, the front desk says, “You’ll get a text with a link to review us. We’d really appreciate it.” Include nurses and medical assistants too, as they often build the closest bond with patients.
9. Stay Active on Social Media
Doctors can support their review efforts by posting patient success stories (with consent) on social media and reminding followers that reviews help others find good care. Social media does not replace review sites but helps spread the word. When patients see a practice sharing content and connecting with the community, they see it as trustworthy and patient-focused. A simple post like “We love hearing from our patients! Think about sharing your experience on Google or Healthgrades” reaches followers who have not yet posted. Social activity builds your online reputation beyond review sites alone.
10. Catch Unhappy Patients Before They Post Negative Reviews
Doctors can prevent negative online reviews by using quick feedback tools or brief post-visit check-ins to spot problems before they go public. A frustrated patient with no way to share concerns inside the office will likely vent on Google or Yelp. Ask “Is there anything we could have done better today?” at checkout. Send a two-question text survey within 30 minutes of the visit. A pediatric practice in Chicago used this approach and had a manager call back any patient who rated below 4. Negative reviews dropped over 40% in the first quarter. Early action protects your online reputation.
11. Show Off Positive Reviews on Your Website and Marketing
Doctors can spark more online reviews by showing existing 4-star and 5-star reviews on their homepage, service pages, newsletters, and social media. When patients see others sharing positive experiences, they feel invited to do the same. Use a review widget on your website or hand-pick reviews with patient consent. Feature standout feedback in email newsletters and social posts. This does double duty: it builds trust with future patients while pushing current patients to add their own reviews.
12. Use Reviews to Keep Improving Your Practice
Doctors can turn online reviews into real improvements by looking at common themes and sharing findings with their team. Patient feedback holds specific, useful details. If many reviews mention long wait times, that is a clear signal to fix scheduling. If several patients praise a staff member by name, that is worth sharing. Set up a monthly review of patient feedback across Google, Healthgrades, and Yelp. Turn patterns into real changes. Share positive highlights with the team for morale. Track whether changes reduce negative mentions over time. Reviews are a free, ongoing source of useful patient feedback.
| Strategy | Effort Level | Expected Impact |
| Ask patients at the right moment | Low | High |
| Follow-up texts/emails after visits | Medium (setup) | Very High |
| Start with loyal patients | Low | Medium |
| QR codes in the office | Low | Medium |
| Email and website links | Low | Low to Medium |
| Patient surveys | Medium | High |
| Make the process simple | Low | High |
| Staff training | Medium | High |
| Social media activity | Medium | Medium |
| Catch unhappy patients early | Medium | High (preventive) |
| Show reviews in marketing | Low | Medium |
| Use reviews for practice improvement | Medium | Long-term High |
How Do You Ask Patients for Reviews Without Breaking HIPAA Rules?
Doctors can ask for online reviews without breaking HIPAA rules by keeping every request general, never mentioning diagnoses or treatments, and training all staff on safe language.
HIPAA limits what healthcare providers can say, not what patients choose to share. A patient can write, “Dr. Smith treated my knee injury, and I’m walking again.” You cannot reply, “Glad your knee surgery went well!” That reply confirms protected health information (PHI).
Your review requests must be the same for every patient. You cannot pick and choose which patients to ask based on their diagnosis or treatment results. A safe, universal message: “We’d love to hear about your experience. If you have a moment, please leave us a review online.”
Train all staff on this boundary. The rule is simple: never mention any health detail in a review request or public response, and never confirm publicly that someone is or was a patient.
Have a written plan for handling reviews that contain PHI. If a patient includes health details in their review, your response must still avoid confirming those details.
| Do | Don’t |
| Use general language: “How was your visit?” | Mention any diagnosis, treatment, or condition |
| Send the same request to all patients | Pick patients to ask based on health status |
| Thank patients for their time | Confirm that someone is or was a patient publicly |
| Offer a direct link to make it easy | Offer rewards for leaving reviews |
| Keep response language neutral if replying | Reveal or confirm any PHI in a public reply |
How Should Doctors Respond to Online Patient Reviews?
Doctors can respond to online patient reviews in two key ways: thanking positive reviewers without confirming clinical details, and addressing negative reviewers by noting their concerns and moving the conversation offline.
Responding to Positive Reviews
Doctors can respond to positive reviews by thanking the reviewer warmly, keeping the reply short and professional, and echoing practice values without confirming any clinical details.
A good response to a positive review: “Thank you for taking the time to share your experience. We’re glad you felt well cared for. Our team works hard to create a welcoming space, and feedback like yours means a lot.”
Notice what this response does not do: it does not confirm the patient’s name, condition, procedure, or any detail from the visit. It stays fully general.
Handling Negative Reviews the Right Way
Doctors can handle negative online reviews by noting the concern without admitting fault, offering to continue the talk in private, and never sharing health details or arguing in public.
A strong response to a negative review: “We’re sorry to hear your experience didn’t meet your expectations. We take all patient feedback seriously. Please contact our office at [phone/email] so we can address your concern directly.”
This does three things: it shows empathy, it signals to future patients reading the review that you care, and it moves the talk to a private channel where you can fix the issue without HIPAA risk.
Never get defensive. Never argue facts in public. Never say, “Actually, that’s not what happened during your visit.” Doing so risks sharing PHI and looks bad no matter what.
If a review breaks platform rules, it contains hate speech, comes from someone who was never a patient, or is spam, you can flag it for removal through Google, Yelp, or the review site.
Why Responding to Every Review Matters
Doctors can boost their local search rankings and get more reviews by responding to every piece of feedback. This shows search engines and patients that the practice values the conversation.
Google’s system sees your responses as a sign that your practice is active. Profiles with regular responses rank higher in local search. Healthgrades and Yelp also reward activity with better placement. Beyond the algorithm, future patients read review responses. A practice that replies to every review, positive or negative, shows professionalism and care.
Practices that respond to all online reviews also get more new reviews over time. Patients are more likely to leave feedback when they see that the practice reads and replies.
What Makes Patients Leave 5-Star Reviews?
Patients leave 5-star online reviews when they feel truly heard, wait very little, get clear answers, and deal with friendly staff throughout the visit.
The common thread in top-rated reviews is not medical skill. It is the patient’s emotional experience. Patients expect good medical care. What surprises and delights them is feeling respected, understood, and valued as a person.
Five things that show up again and again in 5-star doctor reviews:
- Feeling heard: The doctor made eye contact, asked follow-up questions, and did not rush.
- Short wait times: The patient was seen close to their scheduled time.
- Clear communication: The doctor explained the diagnosis, treatment options, and next steps in plain language.
- Friendly staff: Every interaction, from check-in to checkout, felt warm and helpful.
- Easy follow-up: The patient could reach the office after the visit without long hold times or confusing voicemail systems.
Common Mistakes Doctors Make When Asking for Online Reviews
The worst mistake doctors make with online reviews is buying or paying for fake feedback. This breaks platform rules and can lead to profile suspension or removal from Google, Yelp, and Healthgrades.
Here are six mistakes that hurt review efforts:
- Buying or paying for fake reviews: Google and other review sites actively find and remove fake feedback. Practices that get caught face penalties from review removal to full profile suspension. Offering gift cards, discounts, or any reward in exchange for star ratings also breaks Google’s rules and FTC guidelines.
- Filtering reviews: Sending only happy patients to Google or Healthgrades while sending unhappy patients elsewhere breaks platform rules. Google clearly bans asking only for positive reviews. You can ask all patients to share their experience and handle complaints inside your office, but you cannot control who gets the review link based on how they feel.
- Being pushy: Pressuring patients creates discomfort and hurts trust. If a patient says no, respect it. Repeated or forceful requests backfire and can lead to negative reviews about being pressured.
- Ignoring negative reviews: Silence looks like you don’t care. A future patient who sees an unanswered one-star review will wonder if the practice values patient experience. Respond to every negative review quickly and with care across all platforms.
- Making the process too hard: If leaving a review takes more than two taps on a phone, most patients will give up. Test your review links often to make sure they work well on mobile.
- Not claiming all review profiles: Your online reputation exists on every site where patients can leave feedback. Unclaimed profiles on Healthgrades, Yelp, Vitals, or WebMD leave your reputation open to unanswered complaints.
What Tools Help With Online Reputation Management?
Doctors can manage their online reputation well by using review request tools, monitoring dashboards that cover multiple sites, and EHR links that trigger patient outreach at the right time.
Manual review management works for small practices, but it gets too hard to handle as you grow. Once your practice sees 20 or more patients per day, you need automated tools to keep up strong review numbers across Google, Healthgrades, and other sites.
| Tool Type | Examples | Key Feature |
| Review request tools | Birdeye, Podium, Curogram | Sends text/email with direct review links after visits |
| Reputation monitoring | RepuGen, Grade.us | Tracks reviews across sites with real-time alerts |
| Patient experience tools | Press Ganey, eMerit | Survey-to-review funnels and patient insight reports |
| Survey-to-review gateways | Custom NPS tools | Route happy patients to Google, others to internal channels |
Pick tools that connect with your current EHR or practice management system. Standalone tools that need manual data entry slow your team down and are less likely to be used. The best tools pull patient feedback from Google, Healthgrades, Yelp, and Vitals into one dashboard.
How Do You Measure the Results of Your Online Review Plan?
Doctors can measure review results by tracking monthly review count across all sites, average star rating, response rate, Google Business Profile actions, and new patient sources.
Collecting reviews without tracking results leaves you guessing. Set up a simple monthly dashboard with these key numbers:
| Metric | What to Track | Target |
| Monthly new reviews | Count of new reviews per month across all sites | 10 to 20+ for active practices |
| Average star rating | Rolling average across Google, Healthgrades, and Yelp | 4.5+ stars |
| Response rate | Share of reviews with a practice response | 100% |
| GBP profile actions | Calls, website clicks, and direction requests from your Google listing | Growth month over month |
| Review-to-patient tracking | New patients who say online reviews led them to you | Tracked through intake forms |
| Review freshness | Age of most recent reviews across sites | Most within the last 90 days |
Add a question to your new patient intake form: “How did you find us?” Include “Online reviews” as a choice. This simple data point ties review activity to patient growth and gives you a clear return on your effort.
Final Words
Getting more online reviews does not happen by accident. It takes a clear plan, the right tools, and a team that knows how to ask. The good news is that none of these steps is hard on its own. The key is staying consistent.
Start with what you can do today. Claim your profiles, create a direct review link, and ask your most loyal patients to share their experience. Once that foundation is in place, layer in follow-up texts, QR codes, and staff training to keep the momentum going.
Remember that every review matters, and so does every response. How you handle feedback, both positive and negative, shapes how future patients see your practice. A thoughtful reply shows you care. Silence suggests the opposite.
Keep your process simple for patients, stay within HIPAA rules, and track your results each month. Small, steady efforts add up fast. Practices that commit to this approach don’t just collect more reviews. They build lasting trust, attract more patients, and stand out in a crowded market.
Your next five-star review is one good visit and one simple ask away.
Atiur Rahman
Atiur Rahman is a ROI focused healthcare branding and growth marketing expert with 12 years of experience helping doctors and medical practices attract qualified patients. He builds data driven marketing systems that increase visibility, strengthen reputation, and drive measurable revenue growth.
