8 reasons + how to fix them
1. “Your post is pending approval”
What’s happening: the group admin has post approval turned on. Your post is in their moderation queue.
Fix: wait. Most active groups approve within minutes. Some take days. Nothing is wrong with your content.
To check group approval status: go to the group’s About tab → Group settings. If “Post approval” shows “Required”, every post goes through moderation.
2. Silent drop (post appears to publish but isn’t in the feed)
What’s happening: automated moderation removed your post. Facebook’s “Admin Assist” tool lets group admins set up keyword and link filters that auto-reject without notifying the poster.
Fix:
- Read the group’s pinned rules.
- Try posting without any links. If it goes through, the link is the trigger.
- Try posting without specific words (“free”, “DM”, “WhatsApp”, etc.). Many groups block these.
- Posting from a brand-new account? Some groups require N days of membership before posting.
3. “You’re posting too fast”
What’s happening: Facebook’s rate-limit detection has flagged your account.
Fix:
- Stop posting for at least an hour.
- Reduce daily volume to 30–50 posts/day for the next 2–3 days.
- Increase delays between posts to 60–90s.
- Avoid posting from the same account in multiple browsers.
4. “This action wasn’t allowed” / “We removed your post”
What’s happening: an explicit Facebook block, usually because of one of:
- Rules violation in this specific group (the admin manually rejected and reported).
- Your account is on a soft restriction (limited reach for a few days).
- Repeated violations have triggered Facebook-wide spam classification.
Fix:
- Skip this group for at least a week.
- Check facebook.com/support/your-violations for any recent violations on your account.
- If you got the warning multiple times in a row, take a 24–48h posting break.
5. Blocked link
What’s happening: Facebook has flagged your domain (or a link-shortener like bit.ly/tinyurl). Posts containing the link are silently suppressed or blocked.
Fix:
- Drop the link. Post the text + image only.
- After publishing, add the link as the first comment instead of in the post body. This works in 90% of cases.
- Use a different domain (your main site instead of a redirect domain).
- Avoid link shorteners entirely for FB posting.
6. Image upload failed
What’s happening: Facebook’s media servers occasionally fail uploads, especially for large files.
Fix:
- Reduce image size to under 4 MB.
- Use JPEG instead of PNG for photos.
- Try refreshing the page and reattaching.
7. Group membership issue
What’s happening: you’re no longer a member of the group, or the group switched to admin-invite-only.
Fix: check the group’s main page. If you see “Join” instead of “Member”, you’ve been removed or left. If “Request to join”, admin approval is required.
8. Browser extension conflict (rare)
What’s happening: an ad blocker, privacy extension, or another Facebook tool is interfering with the composer.
Fix:
- Try posting in an incognito window with extensions disabled.
- If it works there, identify which extension is breaking it (disable one at a time).
When to escalate
If you’re getting consistent silent drops or “this action wasn’t allowed” warnings across multiple groups, your account is on a soft restriction. Take a 3–5 day complete posting break (not just lower volume — zero posting). After the break, ramp back up gradually.
How auto posters help (when they don’t make it worse)
Browser-extension auto posters with safe defaults — randomized delays, Spintax variations, image attachment — actually reduce the failure rate vs manual posting at high volume. They do this by:
- Pacing consistently (no accidental “fast posting” warnings from getting eager).
- Varying content via Spintax (no duplicate-content flags).
- Skipping blocked groups automatically (the engine sees the error and moves on).
The reverse is also true: cloud auto posters that bypass safe pacing tend to cause more failures than manual posting. Choose your tool carefully.
Posting in a lot of groups and want fewer failures? MultiGroupPoster ships with the safe-by-default settings discussed in this guide.