Dr.Web False Positive & Blacklist Removal
By DrGlenn — USA-based WordPress security specialist· 290+ cleanups across 34 countries· Updated June 22, 2026
Is Dr.Web flagging your website?
If Dr.Web is warning visitors about your site — with something like “Known infection sources”, “Non-recommended websites”; SpIDer Gate / Parental Control block — it means one of two things: your WordPress site really is infected, or it is a false positive left over from a problem that was already fixed. Either way, here is exactly how to get the warning removed.
Step 1 — Confirm it is really a false positive
Before you ask Dr.Web for a review, make sure the site is actually clean. If you request removal while malware is still present, the flag comes straight back (and some vendors rate-limit repeat requests). Check it two ways:
- Run it through my free Is My Site Hacked? checker for a fast look at injected code, spam and cloaking.
- Cross-check on VirusTotal to see every engine that is flagging you.
If anything turns up, get it fully cleaned first — deleting the visible malware is not enough if a hidden backdoor remains.
Step 2 — Report the false positive to Dr.Web
Report a non-malicious URL through the Dr.Web URL filter form. Submit here: support.drweb.com/new/urlfilter
- Open the Dr.Web URL filter report form.
- Select report category “False alarm”.
- Enter your site’s URL and the category it was wrongly flagged under.
- Add contact details/comments and submit.
- A Dr.Web analyst re-scans the site and replies.
Good to know: The same form handles “False alarm” and “Detection failure”. You can confirm the current verdict first with the online scanner at vms.drweb.com/online.
Step 3 — If the warning keeps coming back
A warning that returns after you have been delisted almost always means the infection was never fully removed — usually a backdoor in a theme file, a rogue admin user, or malware stored in the database. That is exactly what I fix. I am a USA-based WordPress security specialist: I remove the infection completely, submit the delisting on your behalf, and harden the site so it stays clean.
Get my site cleaned · See how it works · read my client reviews.
Frequently asked questions
How long does Dr.Web take to remove the warning? Once your site is genuinely clean and you have submitted the request, most reviews clear within a few days — see the timing note above. Submitting while still infected only restarts the clock.
It keeps coming back — why? Because the real infection (a backdoor, rogue admin, or database payload) is still there. A full cleanup stops the loop.
More removal guides: Google Safe Browsing, Norton Safe Web, McAfee WebAdvisor / SiteAdvisor · all vendor guides · full report-link directory.