Ad Republic's website at adrepublic.co.uk loads to a single "Site Maintenance" placeholder, and Crunchbase lists the company as permanently closed. That framing shapes everything that follows, because the trail of what Ad Republic did is still readable across third-party sources, yet the front door itself is shut.
What the outside record describes is a small London digital marketing firm. Ad Republic Ltd was based in Farringdon, and its work centred on pay-per-click advertising, with SEO, web development, and web design rounding out the menu. The PPC side is where Ad Republic seems to have built its name: campaign optimisation, lifting conversions, and trimming wasted ad spend on the platforms where businesses buy clicks. That is a more focused proposition than the generic full-service pitch, and the specialism reads as genuine. No pricing sits in public view, which is normal for an agency that scopes work per client.
The reputation that survives on review platforms is consistent and, on balance, warm. Trustpilot carries eight reviews of Ad Republic, with the individual write-ups leaning positive and singling out PPC know-how and return on investment. Yell shows several more reviews in a similar tone. SafeBuy lists the company with positive client excerpts. None of these sources hand out a clean aggregate star figure that could be quoted with confidence, so the picture is impressionistic, but the impression is favourable. The Facebook page (adrepublicltd) sits there with no ratings attached, which is unremarkable on its own.
Eight Trustpilot reviews is a modest body of feedback. It is enough to show that real clients were served and came away pleased, but not enough to call Ad Republic widely vetted. For a boutique agency that is a reasonable footprint, since smaller shops rarely accumulate the review volume of a national brand. The clients who did leave comments tended to talk about results, which is the right thing for a PPC specialist to be judged on, and the recurring nod to return on investment points to work that paid for itself more often than not.
Can you hire Ad Republic right now?
On the current evidence, no. The live site offers nothing to act on: no services pages, no portfolio, no navigation, and no way to make contact. There is no phone number, no email, no contact form, and no street address on the page that visitors reach. The Farringdon location turns up in SafeBuy and Yell entries, but neither pins down a specific address or a working line that could be confirmed from the company's own site. For a firm whose old reputation rests on advertising performance, the irony of an unreachable web presence is hard to miss.
That gap is significant for a service business. A marketing agency lives or dies on whether a prospect can reach it, and a maintenance screen with no contact route is the opposite of reachable. Pair that with the Crunchbase "permanently closed" marker and the most plausible reading is that Ad Republic has wound down or paused, not that it is mid-relaunch. The maintenance placeholder may simply be what a dormant domain looks like.
It is fair to hold open the smaller possibility that the firm is rebuilding behind that page. Agencies do redesign and go quiet for a stretch. The honest position is that nothing on the live site supports that hope, and the third-party record points the other way. Anyone weighing the company should treat the positive reviews as an account of past work, not a promise of current availability.
What keeps this entry from being a dead end is the substance behind it while it lasted. Ad Republic ran a defined craft in PPC management, branched sensibly into search and build work, and earned client praise tied to measurable outcomes. That is a respectable record, and it is the part worth holding onto once you set the closed sign aside.
There is also a quieter lesson in how to read a listing like this one. Whatever Ad Republic once published about itself is gone, so the only testimony left is what clients and registries wrote. In Ad Republic's case those independent sources agree with one another, which makes the positive view harder to dismiss than a self-published claim. The consistency across Trustpilot, Yell, and SafeBuy is the strongest thing Ad Republic has going for it now.
What is missing is any sign of life from the business side: no fresh content, no updated address, no active channel. For a buyer that absence outweighs the kind reviews, because you cannot transact with a reputation. The reviews tell you Ad Republic did good work; the maintenance page tells you that good work is probably not available to buy today.
The verdict splits along the line between past and present. Ad Republic looks like it delivered for the clients who hired it, but as a vendor you could engage this week it is not in a position to be recommended. There is no door to knock on, and a registry flag marks the door as closed for good. Anyone trying to confirm otherwise should look through Yell or its Trustpilot profile and ask directly whether Ad Republic is taking new accounts, then move to a clearly active London PPC agency if the answer is silence or confirmation of closure. Praise is not a substitute for a live partner who picks up the phone.
Business address
Ad Republic Ltd
74 Clerkenwell Road,
Farringdon,
London
EC1M 5QA
United Kingdom
Contact details
Phone: 02036409245