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Rating Leader sells Google reviews from a product page — pick a quantity, pay, wait. That works if your only problem is Google. If your rating is hurting and you can't afford a misfire — Trustpilot complaints about removals and pacing are public — OrderBoosts plans the whole profile instead of just shipping reviews and hoping.
OrderBoosts
You get a managed plan, not a cart. We pick the platforms that actually move your buyers (Google, Trustpilot, G2, Capterra, Yelp, TripAdvisor, app stores, Chrome Web Store), pace the orders so platform filters don't strip them, and give you the TrustScore Calculator and Velocity Planner before you spend a cent. If something drops, we replace it — without you having to argue.

Rating Leader
Rating Leader is built for one job: a buyer who already knows they want Google reviews, knows the quantity, and is comfortable buying it like a t-shirt. It's a checkout flow with options for review count, language, and a stated delivery window — fine for that narrow use case.
Read this before you pay
These aren't our claims — they're public Trustpilot reviews and third-party site-safety checks. We're linking the sources so you can read them yourself. Profiles change, so verify before you commit money.
Trustpilot listed Rating Leader with 26 reviews and a 23% one-star share when checked. Recent complaints allege review removals, pacing issues, and weak accountability.
Scam Detector classifies ratingleader.com as a low-trust site and frames the review as a caution signal rather than a clean safety endorsement.
Scam Detector reportSide by side
Both let you buy Google reviews. Only one helps you decide whether Google is even the platform that's actually losing you deals — and only one has a public track record on Trustpilot that doesn't read like a warning label.
| Criteria | OrderBoosts | Rating Leader | Practical read |
|---|---|---|---|
| What you're actually buying | A managed campaign — platform pick, pacing, replacements, and a real person who answers when something needs fixing. | A Google review order. You pick quantity, they ship, and the rest is on you. | If your reputation problem is bigger than one Google order, the product page can't solve it. |
| How the buying decision works | Free planning first: TrustScore Calculator, Velocity Planner, fit check on a call if you want one. | Add to cart. No planning layer beyond product options. | Rating Leader is faster if you're sure. OrderBoosts is safer if you're not — and most buyers shouldn't be. |
| Platforms covered | Google, Trustpilot, G2, Capterra, Yelp, TripAdvisor, Google Play, and Chrome Web Store — plus the planning pages for each. | Google reviews. The reviewed public page doesn't sell anything else. | If your buyers research you on more than one site, this is decisive. |
| Pricing | Public packages from $100 for 5 reviews (Google), $100 for 5 reviews (Trustpilot), $150 for 5 reviews (G2), $150 for 5 reviews (Capterra) — all with managed delivery and replacements. | Listed at 8.99 EUR base on the reviewed product page, scaling with review count. | Cheaper unit price means little if the reviews don't stick. Read the Trustpilot complaints first. |
| Third-party trust signal | Public Trustpilot profile and external listings (DesignRush, topseos, openPR) buyers can verify. | Trustpilot shows roughly a 23% one-star share with recent complaints about removals and pacing. | This is the single most important row. Read both before you pay. |
Why teams switch to us
A checkout sells you a quantity. We sell you an outcome — reviews that survive the filter, on the platforms that actually move your sale, with someone you can email when something needs fixing.
Before you spend, we tell you which platform your buyers actually check — Google, Trustpilot, G2, Capterra, Yelp, TripAdvisor, app stores, or Chrome. Most teams fixing Google are bleeding deals on Trustpilot and don't know it yet.
Twenty reviews in a week is a filter event, not a campaign. Our Velocity Planner sets a cadence that lifts your rating without lighting up Google's spam signal or Trustpilot's compliance team.
SaaS shortlists live on G2 and Capterra. Hotels live on TripAdvisor. Apps live on Google Play. If you're not a local shop trying to win a map pack, a Google-only seller can't actually help you.
Where Rating Leader is fair
We won't pretend they have no merits — they do, for a narrow use case. The real question is whether that narrow use case is your situation. If it isn't, the strengths below stop being relevant.
If you already know exactly what you want, Rating Leader's product page is fast — pick a quantity, pick a language, pay.
The page lets you brief the review text and language up front, which can be useful if you have very specific copy in mind.
Rating Leader publishes delivery, support, and replacement promises on the product page — though their Trustpilot complaints suggest verifying these before relying on them.
Where reviews actually move the sale
Most providers sell you reviews on the platform they're set up for, not the one your buyers are checking. Pick the moment first — local search, B2B shortlist, app or hotel booking — then buy the reviews that show up there. That's how budget turns into deals instead of inventory.
Google and Yelp
When buyers compare nearby providers, the right plan usually needs volume, recency, response behavior, and platform-specific pacing.
G2 and Capterra
Software buyers look at review depth before they speak to sales, so the campaign should account for category intent and comparison behavior.
TripAdvisor, Google Play, Chrome Web Store
Hospitality, apps, and extensions need trust signals at the moment a prospect decides whether to book, download, or install.
If your only job is to push a Google profile up by ten reviews this week and you've read the Trustpilot complaints with open eyes, Rating Leader will do it. For everything else — multiple platforms, real pacing, reviews that don't disappear, an actual partner you can email when something breaks — that's what OrderBoosts is for.
Show your work
Rating Leader details are based on its public Google review product page reviewed on May 31, 2026. Competitor pricing, delivery, and policy language can change.
Before you commit
A short list of guides — ours and a couple of independent ones — covering the risks, the math, and where to double-check us. If we were trying to hide something, we wouldn't link these.
Straight answers, no hedging — the questions buyers actually ask before they pay.
Yes — and for most buyers, the better one. Rating Leader is a Google checkout. OrderBoosts is a managed service: we pick the right platforms, pace the delivery so the reviews aren't stripped, replace any that drop, and give you planning tools before you spend.
You should at least read them. Trustpilot showed roughly a 23% one-star share when we checked, with recent complaints about removed reviews and slow accountability. That's not us saying it — that's their public review profile. Open the linked source and decide for yourself.
If you need a one-off Google order, you've already read the Trustpilot reviews, and you don't need help thinking about platform fit or recovery pacing. For most reputation problems, that's not the situation.
From public Rating Leader and OrderBoosts pages, Trustpilot, and Scam Detector — all reviewed May 31, 2026. Sources are linked at the bottom of this page so you can verify everything before you buy.
Send your current rating, review count, the platform you think you need, and your timeline. We'll come back with a plan that fits — including whether you should buy reviews at all, where, and how fast. No commitment, no upsell to a package that doesn't fit your problem.