Last updated: June 2026
Your Google Business Profile rewards the businesses that keep it active, and that is exactly the work that falls off your plate first. These free AI prompts for Google Business Profile are the shortcut: copy one, paste in your business details, and get a publish-ready description, a month of posts, or a review reply in under a minute. These are not one-line prompts. Each is a full fill-in spec that tells the AI what to produce and how, so you get usable copy instead of generic filler. The full pack covers 40 tasks, from your profile basics to getting cited by AI assistants like ChatGPT and Gemini.
Get all 40 prompts in one file
The prompts below get you moving. The full pack has 40, organized by task, each one ready to copy, paste, and run, including the get-found-by-AI prompts most lists skip.
Enter your email in the form on the right and the download link lands right away.
How to use these AI prompts for Google Business Profile
Every prompt is a fill-in spec built on the same five-part shape, which is what turns a vague answer into a useful one:
- Role — who the AI should act as.
- Context — your real business details. The more specific, the better the result.
- Task — exactly what to produce.
- Rules — the limits that keep it accurate and on-brand.
- Output — the exact format you want back.
Fill in every [bracket] with your real details, treat the first answer as a draft and ask for a sharper version, and fact-check before you publish. Skip "think step by step" too, since modern models already do that and it can make the output worse. Every prompt works the same in ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or Perplexity.
The 5 prompts every profile needs first
Start with the five tasks that move your profile the most. These are the same jobs Google's own AI highlights when people search for GBP prompts, so nail them first.
1. Write your Google Business Profile description
a 750-character description that ranks and reads naturally.
Act as a local SEO copywriter.
Context: my business is [type of business] in [city, state]; my top 3 services or products are [service 1, service 2, service 3]; what makes me different is [differentiator]; my target customer is [customer type].
Task: write my Google Business Profile description.
Rules: max 750 characters (count them); lead with the main service and city in the first sentence; weave in keywords naturally without stuffing; no emojis; no hype words like "best" or "leading"; write in [first person / third person]; do not mention promotions or prices.
Output: one paste-ready paragraph, then a short note listing which local keywords you included.
2. Choose your primary and secondary categories
the category combination that decides which searches you show up for.
Act as a Google Business Profile optimization specialist.
Context: my business is [describe what you do in plain language]; I am located in [city, state]; my main revenue sources are [list top 2-3 services or product lines]; my closest competitors that rank well on Google Maps are [competitor 1, competitor 2].
Task: recommend one primary category and up to 9 secondary categories for my Google Business Profile.
Rules: use only categories that exist in Google's official category list; put the most revenue-driving service as the primary; rank secondary categories by search-volume relevance, not alphabetically; flag any category that might trigger Google's "unverified business" review.
Output: a numbered list — line 1 is PRIMARY in bold, the rest are SECONDARY; add a one-sentence reason for each.
3. Build a month of Google Posts
a full month of posts mapped to dates, types, and calls to action.
Act as a local content strategist who knows Google Business Profile post types.
Context: my business is [type] in [city]; my main services or products are [list]; key dates or events this [month/year] are [holidays, promotions, local events, or "none"]; I can post [number] times per week.
Task: create a posting calendar for [month] with one row per post: publish date, post type (Update, Offer, Event, or Product), topic and headline, and a CTA.
Rules: use only current post types (no COVID type); space posts evenly; vary types; tie at least two to the dates I provided; no filler posts.
Output: a table — Date | Type | Headline | CTA; then a one-line note on which post to prioritize if I only have time for four.
4. Reply to reviews like a human, not a bot
five ready-to-paste responses that sound like you.
Act as a customer experience copywriter who specializes in local business voice.
Context: my business is [type], located in [city]; my brand voice is [formal / warm / casual / other]; I typically attract [type of customer].
Task: write five distinct response templates for genuine 5-star reviews, covering (1) a compliment on service, (2) a compliment on a specific staff member, (3) a first-time customer, (4) a loyal returning customer, (5) a review that mentions price or value.
Rules: each template must feel personal, not copy-paste generic; mention the business type naturally once; no emojis unless I tell you my brand uses them; 2-4 sentences each; include a subtle call to action in at least two templates.
Output: five numbered templates, each with a one-line label showing which scenario it covers.
5. Write a website FAQ Google's AI can quote
an FAQ that feeds accurate answers to Google's AI responses about your business.
Act as an SEO content strategist who understands how Google's AI surfaces local business information.
Context: my business is [type] in [city]; my main services are [list]; common pre-contact questions are [list 5-8 real ones]; my answers are [paste or describe them].
Task: write a complete website FAQ — 8 to 12 Q&A pairs — designed so Google's AI can pull clear, accurate answers.
Rules: 40-80 words per answer; front-load the direct answer in the first sentence; include my business type and city naturally at least twice; cover hours, pricing range, service area, first-visit expectations, and a policy that prevents surprises; no answers that dodge the question.
Output: a "Frequently Asked Questions" H2, each question in bold followed by its answer, publish-ready.
Why most AI prompt lists are wrong in 2026
If a prompt list tells you to "fill out your profile's Q&A with AI" or "turn on chat," it was written for a Google Business Profile that no longer exists. Two changes broke the old playbook:
- The public Q&A section was removed in 2025. There is nothing to fill. Put your questions and answers in a website FAQ instead (prompt 5 above), where Google's AI can actually read and quote them.
- Profile chat was retired in 2024. Point customers to call, your website form, WhatsApp, and SMS, and reply fast.
The prompts in this pack are written for how Google Business Profile works now, including a section for the newest shift: getting recommended by AI assistants.
Get found by AI: prompts for ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini (GEO)
More people now ask an AI assistant for a local recommendation instead of scrolling Maps. Generative engine optimization (GEO) is making sure those assistants name your business. This is the part the other prompt lists skip.
Make your business citable by AI assistants
a prioritized plan to get cited by ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini.
Act as a Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) specialist focused on local businesses.
Context: my business is [type] in [city/neighborhood]; primary services are [service 1, 2, 3]; my website is [URL]; my Google Business Profile status is [complete / partially complete / just claimed].
Task: produce a prioritized action plan to get my business cited by ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini when users ask for [service] in [city].
Rules: focus only on actions a local business can take without a developer (website content, GBP accuracy, structured-data basics, citation consistency, review recency); note that content updated within the last 30 days gets significantly more AI citations; do not recommend paid ads or social-only tactics as primary GEO moves.
Output: a numbered list of 6-8 actions ranked by impact, each with a one-sentence reason and a realistic time estimate.
What's inside the full pack: 40 prompts, 10 categories
The five above are the start. The full AI Prompt Pack covers every job your profile needs:
- Profile setup and optimization — description, categories, services, attributes, service areas.
- Visual content — photo content calendar, shot list, a 30-second welcome video script.
- Local SEO and citations — keyword list, citation directories, NAP audit, UTM tagging, compliance check.
- Reviews — positive and negative response templates, a review-request plan, email and SMS asks, review analysis.
- Posts and offers — monthly calendar, post ideas, promo sequences, seasonal templates.
- Contact and FAQ — reply templates and a website FAQ for AI.
- Get found by AI (GEO) — get cited by ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini, plus an AI-visibility check.
- Performance and strategy — profile performance analysis, a 90-day plan, competitor gaps, monthly reports.
- Advanced and extras — multi-location descriptions, customer-story posts, and a meta-prompt to sharpen any prompt.
Two more worth running early:
Spot suspension risks before Google does (compliance check)
catching the policy violations that get profiles suspended.
Act as a Google Business Profile policy compliance expert.
Context: my business name on GBP is [exact name]; my category is [primary category]; my address or service area is [address or city/region]; my profile has [anything unusual: a keyword in the name, a virtual office, multiple listings, a home address, a practitioner listing alongside a business listing].
Task: review my profile for violations that could cause a soft or hard suspension.
Rules: check name stuffing, ineligible addresses, duplicate listings, misleading categories, fake-review patterns, and lead-gen numbers; rate each risk HIGH / MEDIUM / LOW; give a specific fix for each; if borderline, say so; do not fabricate policy details, point me to the official Google Business Profile Help Center if uncertain.
Output: a risk table — Policy Area, Issue Found, Risk Level, Recommended Fix; end with a 3-item "safe practices going forward" list.
Build your local keyword list
the discovery terms your customers actually type.
Act as a local SEO keyword researcher.
Context: my business is a [type of business] in [city, state]; my top services are [service 1, 2, 3]; my customers are typically [homeowners, parents, business owners, etc.]; my main competitors on Google Maps are [names or "unknown"].
Task: build a local keyword list to optimize my Google Business Profile, website, and content.
Rules: include four types — (1) core service + city, (2) near-me variants, (3) problem or symptom terms, (4) comparison or decision terms; aim for 25-35 keywords; flag the top 10 as HIGH PRIORITY; no branded competitor names.
Output: a table — Keyword, Type (1-4), Priority (High/Medium); end with a 3-sentence note on how to use them in my GBP fields.
Get the full AI Prompt Pack for Google Business Profile
Forty copy-paste prompts, organized by the 10 jobs your profile actually needs, each built as a fill-in spec so the output is usable on the first try. Print it, share it with whoever runs your profile, or keep it open next to ChatGPT.
Add your email to the form on the right to get all 40 prompts in one file.
AI prompts for Google Business Profile FAQ
Are these AI prompts for Google Business Profile free?
Yes. A full set is on this page, free to copy. Enter your email for the complete 40-prompt pack as one copy-paste file.
Which AI tool should I use, ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, or Perplexity?
Any of them. The prompts use the same fill-in structure across all four. Use the tool you already have, and a current model for longer tasks like the 90-day plan.
Will AI-generated content hurt my Google Business Profile?
No, as long as it is accurate and helpful. Google allows AI-assisted content. What gets penalized is keyword stuffing, fake details, or a name that breaks the guidelines. Always review before you publish.
Can I use AI to fill my Google Business Profile Q&A?
The public Q&A section was removed in 2025, so there is nothing to fill. Use the website FAQ prompt instead, and keep your description, services, and reviews complete so Google's AI answers customers correctly.
What is GEO, and why is it in a Google Business Profile pack?
GEO (generative engine optimization) is getting your business cited by AI assistants like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini. More people ask AI for local recommendations, and your Google Business Profile and website are the main sources those engines pull from.
Prompts get you the draft. We build the whole engine.
These prompts save you hours on your profile. If you want local SEO, search, paid media, web, and automation working together and producing real leads, that is what we do at tamer, here in Miami.
Start with a free marketing plan. We will review your site, your Google Business Profile, and your top local competitors, then hand you a clear plan of what to fix first. We reply within one business hour.
Call (786) 945-7843 · 6175 NW 186th Street, Hialeah, FL 33015 · Fully bilingual team, English and Spanish.
