If your suspension period has officially expired and your account is still restricted, the issue is rarely the timer itself.
Temporary suspensions are often scheduled to end at a specific timestamp.
However, expiration of time does not automatically guarantee restoration of permissions.
There are two important details users often overlook.
First, the “end date” may refer to when eligibility for reinstatement begins — not when access instantly returns.
Second, some systems require a follow-up status check after the suspension window closes.
If that verification step is delayed, your account may remain inactive even though the suspension clock has reached zero.
Time zones can also create confusion.
An expiration timestamp may be recorded in UTC rather than your local time, meaning the effective end could occur hours later than expected.
When a suspension period has ended but access is still blocked, confirm:
The exact suspension end timestamp and whether the reinstatement process has been executed.
Because expiration of a restriction period and execution of reinstatement are not always simultaneous events.