Website Blocked or Access Denied

A site you need for work returns "Access Denied," ERR_BLOCKED_BY_ADMINISTRATOR, or just won't load? Work through these steps in order — step 1 tells you who's actually responsible.

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Website Blocked or Access Denied

A site you need for work is blocked, returns an error, or just won't load

⚠ Common symptoms

  • "ERR_BLOCKED_BY_ADMINISTRATOR" or "Access Denied" in the browser
  • Site loads fine on mobile data or at home, but not on work Wi-Fi
  • A specific tool or platform loads its homepage but blocks login
  • Your browser shows a certificate warning before the block page
  • 1

    Identify who is blocking the site

    The block message itself usually tells you: a browser-level block says "Your administrator has blocked this site." A network-level block (from a firewall or DNS filter) usually shows a branded block page from tools like Cisco Umbrella, Forcepoint, or Zscaler. Knowing the source determines who can un-block it.

  • 2

    Check browser extensions and parental controls

    Certain browser extensions (ad blockers, security tools, VPN extensions) block specific sites. Try opening the site in an Incognito or Private window, which disables most extensions by default. If it loads there, an extension is the blocker — disable them one at a time to find the culprit.

  • 3

    Check your hosts file for manual blocks

    Some software (and malware) adds entries to the system hosts file to block domains. Open Notepad as Administrator and open the file at:

    C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts

    Look for any lines pointing the blocked domain to 127.0.0.1. Delete those lines, save the file, and retest.

  • 4

    Request an exception from your IT team

    If the block comes from a corporate firewall or DNS filter, only your IT/network team can whitelist it. Contact your IT help desk with the exact URL, a brief business justification, and the error message you're seeing. Most corporate IT teams can process whitelisting requests within a business day.

⚠️

Do not attempt to bypass corporate network blocks using a personal VPN on a company device. This violates most acceptable-use policies and could result in a security review of your device.

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Related Questions

Quick answers for this issue

It means a browser-level policy — usually set by a company's device management software (MDM) — is blocking the site at the Chrome or Edge policy level, separate from any network firewall. Only your IT administrator can change this policy; clearing cache or switching networks won't help.
No. Using a personal VPN to bypass corporate network blocks on a company device typically violates acceptable-use policies and can trigger a security review of the device. Request a formal exception from IT instead — it's faster and avoids any compliance issues.
Not quite — a certificate warning before a block page usually means your company uses an SSL inspection proxy that intercepts HTTPS traffic, and its certificate may be expired or untrusted on your device. This is closer to an authentication/certificate issue; see our Authentication Errors guide for the certificate troubleshooting step.
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Not sure who's blocking the site?

Connect with a verified IT technician for remote support — they can identify whether the block is browser policy, an extension, or a network firewall, and help draft the IT exception request.

Talk to a Technician

Website access trouble often overlaps with these.

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