Sites Unblocker — Google
If you are technically inclined and tired of broken public proxies, build your own.
You will need:
The Method (Glype Proxy): You can install a self-hosted web proxy script (like PHProxy or Glype) on your VPS.
The Advantage: Only you control the proxy. No ads, no malware, no logging. Your firewall sees you connecting to your VPS (looks like a normal website), not a "public proxy list."
If coding isn't your style, the internet is littered with pre-made unblockers hosted on Google Sites. However, note that these are public. If your IT department is savvy, they will find and block this specific URL quickly. google sites unblocker
Search strategy: Instead of searching for "Google Sites unblocker" (which IT teams monitor), search for:
Warning: Never log into your personal bank or social media using a stranger's Google Sites proxy. The site owner can technically see the traffic passing through their code.
Since proxies rewrite the HTML of the page to make it work, they have the technical ability to inject malicious ads or malware into the Google Site you are trying to view.
Go to sites.google.com and create a blank site. You can name it something innocuous, like "Math Homework Helper" or "Period 3 Resources." If you are technically inclined and tired of
A “Google Sites unblocker” is not an official tool or feature provided by Google. Instead, it refers to any method—proxy sites, VPNs, cached views, or URL tricks—used to access a Google Sites webpage that has been blocked, typically by a school, workplace, or government firewall. Google Sites itself is a free, drag-and-drop website builder; but many institutions block entire sites.google.com domain to prevent distraction or bypass content filters.
If you are the owner of a Google Site (not just a visitor), you have the ultimate unblocker at your fingertips: Custom Domains.
Google Sites allows you to publish your site to a custom URL (e.g., www.myclassroom.com) instead of the default sites.google.com/view/classroom.
Why this works:
Network filters usually block sites.google.com, but they cannot block every single domain on the internet. If you buy a cheap domain ($10/year on Google Domains or Namecheap) and point it to your Google Site, the firewall sees a clean, unrecognized domain. The Method (Glype Proxy): You can install a
Warning: Do not use this to violate your school's Acceptable Use Policy (AUP), but for legitimate educational sharing, this is the most robust solution.
Click Publish. Because the address is sites.google.com/view/your-fake-name, the network filter sees a trusted educational domain and allows the traffic to pass.
Google Sites allows anyone to create a website. While most are used for portfolios or projects, malicious actors have historically used Google Sites to host phishing links, proxy services, or gaming emulators. Consequently, network filters often flag the entire sites.google.com subdomain as a "Webmail/Storage/Proxy" category rather than a legitimate "Business" tool.