What does Google say about SEO? /
Domain age and historical factors remain hotly debated topics in the SEO community. This category compiles Google's official statements regarding how domain age, history, and accumulated reputation influence search rankings. SEO professionals frequently question whether the sandbox effect truly exists for new websites, whether older domains hold inherent advantages, and how a site's history impacts current performance—including previous ownership changes, past penalties, and archived content. Google representatives have consistently addressed these concerns, particularly regarding the concept of trust built over time. Understanding these official positions helps practitioners separate persistent myths from actual ranking factors recognized by Google's algorithms. This knowledge proves invaluable when acquiring expired domains, conducting site migrations, or implementing rebranding strategies where historical signals can significantly impact future SEO performance. These declarations provide clarity on what truly matters: quality content and user experience rather than mere domain age, helping SEO specialists make informed strategic decisions based on verified information rather than speculation or outdated assumptions about temporal ranking factors.
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★★ Is your site migration stuck in 'pending' status in Search Console? Find out why!
A site move displayed as 'pending' in Search Console for months after submission signals no problem. This status simply indicates that Google is keeping track of the move. There is no 'completed' stat...
John Mueller Sep 14, 2020
Why does Search Console only show partial data for the News section at launch?
Data for the News section in Search Console (for News mode in Search, not Google News App) only goes back to around July 2020, which is when data collection began. For older sites, this view will be l...
John Mueller Sep 14, 2020
★★★ Does the alt attribute still play a role in web page SEO?
The alt attribute should accurately describe the content of the image (e.g., transcribe a quote if the image is a quote). Google uses the alt to understand the image for Image Search, not for traditio...
John Mueller Sep 14, 2020
★★★ Do internal links really play a role in Google ranking?
Creating internal links from old pages to new or relevant pages improves SEO. This helps Google crawl the site, understand which pages are important (the most linked), and better distribute internal a...
John Mueller Sep 14, 2020
★★ Should you mimic competitors who rise after a core update?
After a drop due to a core update, it is relevant to analyze the pages that now rank better to identify trends (e.g., informational vs commercial content). This helps to understand what users are look...
John Mueller Sep 14, 2020
★★★ Should you really limit text content on your e-commerce category pages?
On e-commerce category pages, it is essential to find a balance. Too much informational content (e.g., several encyclopedic paragraphs) can cause the page to be classified as informational rather than...
John Mueller Sep 14, 2020
★★★ Do core updates really recalculate your scores continuously between deployments?
Unlike the old Panda or Penguin updates where scores were frozen until the next refresh, modern core updates see their scores regularly refreshed between two major deployments. Google can recalculate ...
John Mueller Sep 14, 2020
★★★ Should You Really Implement Hreflang for International SEO?
Fabrice Canal (Bing) explained on Twitter that Microsoft's search engine pays relatively little attention to the content of the Hreflang tag, which is less important in any case than language detectio...
Google Sep 14, 2020
★★ Why does Google show spam in brand search results beyond the first page?
If phishing or spam sites are massively appearing on deep pages (top 10 pages) of brand results, it’s often because Google lacks quality content to show beyond the first page. Patterns of spam should ...
John Mueller Sep 14, 2020
★★ Is it true that Google now allows natural keyword repetition in product listings?
When products in a category naturally share the same brand prefix (e.g., 'Intel' for all Intel processors), this repetition is not regarded as keyword stuffing. Google understands that this is the nor...
John Mueller Sep 14, 2020
★★★ Could your meta tags be hiding from Google without you even knowing?
Some third-party scripts inject tags (e.g. iframe) at the top of the <head>, which can lead Google to believe that the <head> is prematurely closed. Result: robots metatag, canonical, hreflang may be ...
John Mueller Sep 14, 2020
★★ How does Google really deindex an expired site or one that’s globally 404?
When a site becomes 404 or expires, Google does not immediately deindex all pages. Frequently crawled pages (homepage, categories) disappear quickly, while others do so more slowly. Google attempts to...
John Mueller Sep 14, 2020
★★★ Can generated content for location pages really escape Google's duplicate content filter?
For location pages (e.g., 50 states with similar content), generated content can work if it contains enough relevant facts and differing information from one city to another. If the content is too sim...
Martin Splitt Sep 09, 2020
★★★ Should you really merge your similar content for better ranking?
Merging similar content and implementing redirects reduces Google’s crawl workload and helps centralize relevance and information in one place. This makes it easier to identify the right content to pr...
Martin Splitt Sep 09, 2020
★★ How does Google really detect duplicate content with fingerprinting?
Google creates a digital fingerprint of the content and uses similarity metrics to determine if two pages are duplicates. If about 95% of the content is identical (e.g., the same product description w...
Martin Splitt Sep 09, 2020
★★★ Can Google Really Block a Page's Visibility Based on Country?
John Mueller explained on Twitter that there is no system or mechanism on Google's search engine to limit a page's visibility to one country or another. For example, a page that could be visible on Go...
John Mueller Sep 09, 2020
★★★ Should you really consolidate your FAQ pages to dodge thin content penalties?
For help centers featuring hundreds of pages addressing very specific questions in just one or two sentences, Google may treat them as thin content. It is advisable to group similar or related questio...
Martin Splitt Sep 09, 2020
★★★ Should you update your existing content instead of creating new pages?
For similar content published each year (e.g., skincare routines), it's better to update the existing page and reposition it on the site rather than create a new page. Google may consider very similar...
Martin Splitt Sep 09, 2020
★★★ Do Images in XML Sitemaps Count Toward the 50,000 URL Limit?
We know that XML Sitemap files are limited to 50,000 URLs. We also know that for each page URL, we can indicate the URLs of the main images it contains. But do these image URLs count as part of the 50...
John Mueller Sep 09, 2020
★★★ Are structured data really unnecessary for Google SEO?
Structured data is not a requirement for a page to be indexed or ranked by Google. If a single page on a site lacks structured data or a specific type like mainEntity, it won't be an issue for SEO....
John Mueller Sep 04, 2020
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