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age, helping SEO specialists make informed strategic decisions based on verified information rather than speculation or outdated assumptions about temporal ranking factors.
Quick SEO Quiz

Test your SEO knowledge in 5 questions

Less than a minute. Find out how much you really know about Google search.

🕒 ~1 min 🎯 5 questions
★★ Does JavaScript really consume more crawl budget than classic HTML?
JavaScript sites may consume slightly more crawl budget if JS makes extra network requests, but Google caches common resources (JS, CSS, identical images) between pages. The real impact on crawl budge...
Martin Splitt Jun 17, 2020
★★ Is it really essential to split your JavaScript by page to optimize crawling?
It is possible and recommended to load scripts (like reCAPTCHA) only on the pages where they are necessary, using code splitting techniques to optimize performance....
Martin Splitt Jun 17, 2020
★★ Should you still be concerned about native lazy loading for SEO?
Googlebot Chromium supports native lazy loading of images (loading='lazy'), introduced in recent versions of Chrome....
Martin Splitt Jun 17, 2020
★★ Should you really align desktop, mobile, and AMP behaviors to avoid SEO pitfalls?
Using different approaches or user behaviors between desktop, mobile, and AMP (for example, layers on mobile vs full pages on desktop) is not recommended. This complexity invites more potential proble...
Martin Splitt Jun 17, 2020
★★ Why doesn’t Google need to download your images to index them?
Images are often not downloaded by Search Console testing tools for performance reasons, but this does not affect indexing. For the main web crawl, Google only needs the image URL, alt text, and conte...
Martin Splitt Jun 17, 2020
★★★ Does late JavaScript really hurt your Google indexing?
For scripts that modify elements like title tags or headings, it is recommended to load them as early as possible in the page rendering. Google uses heuristics to determine when the page is complete; ...
Martin Splitt Jun 17, 2020
★★ Is it true that native lazy loading is crawled by Googlebot?
The headless Chromium-based Googlebot supports native lazy loading for images (loading='lazy' attribute)....
Martin Splitt Jun 17, 2020
★★★ What are the chances that Googlebot is missing your critical JavaScript changes?
When a JavaScript script modifies critical elements (title, headings) on the client side, it must be loaded as early as possible. If the script runs too late after the initial load, Googlebot may miss...
Martin Splitt Jun 17, 2020
★★★ Is your lazy loading preventing Google from detecting your images?
If lazy loading shows placeholder URLs in the rendered HTML instead of the real image URLs, Google will only see the placeholders. This indicates an incorrect lazy loading implementation that needs to...
Martin Splitt Jun 17, 2020
★★ Can you really have a good FID while suffering from catastrophic TTI?
It is possible to have a good First Input Delay score while having poor Time to Interactive and Total Blocking Time scores, likely due to intermittent blocking of the main thread not captured by FID. ...
Martin Splitt Jun 17, 2020
★★★ Should you really worry about the screenshot in Search Console?
In Search Console, if the rendered HTML contains the expected images and content, that’s sufficient. Screenshot generation failures or headless Chromium errors are not indexing issues. Only the render...
Martin Splitt Jun 17, 2020
★★ Is it true that blocking a site without JavaScript risks an SEO penalty?
Completely blocking a site without JavaScript and displaying a 'please enable JavaScript' message does not result in a direct SEO penalty, but it poses user experience issues if JavaScript fails or is...
Martin Splitt Jun 17, 2020
★★ What event does Googlebot really wait for to index your content: DOMContentLoaded or Load?
DOMContentLoaded fires when the DOM has been fully parsed, but before all resources (images, iframes) are completely loaded. The Load event waits for all resources referenced in the DOM to be download...
Martin Splitt Jun 17, 2020
★★★ Is it true that word count is really unnecessary for ranking on Google?
Google does not use word count as a ranking factor. There is no minimum word count to be reached (1000, 5000 words). Sometimes short pages are excellent for users, and sometimes long pages are. The im...
John Mueller Jun 12, 2020
★★ Does user-generated content really expose your site's SEO liability?
If you publish user-generated content (UGC) on your site, Google considers it to be content you have chosen to publish. It is not necessary to use rel=UGC, but if the content is of low quality, it's u...
John Mueller Jun 12, 2020
★★★ Why does Google only crawl a fraction of your known pages?
Google has only crawled a portion of known URLs from a site since its inception. If Google crawls 20,000 pages out of 100,000 known (via sitemap), only those 20,000 can be indexed. This number increas...
John Mueller Jun 12, 2020
★★★ Does geotargeting really depend solely on ccTLD and Search Console?
For geotargeting, Google mainly uses the geographic top-level domain (ccTLD) or the geotargeting setting in Search Console. Links and the server's IP address are only used when Google lacks clear info...
John Mueller Jun 12, 2020
Why does Google sometimes index your AMP pages before their canonical HTML version?
Google may sometimes discover and index an AMP page before its canonical HTML version, especially if links point directly to the AMP. Once the HTML page is crawled, Google connects the two versions an...
John Mueller Jun 12, 2020
★★★ Does structured data really influence rankings on Google?
Adding additional types of structured data (such as online schema) does not change page rankings. It provides more information to Google and can generate different rich results, but it does not affect...
John Mueller Jun 12, 2020
★★★ Core Web Vitals: Why do your laboratory tests fail to impact your ranking?
Google uses field data from the Chrome User Experience Report for ranking, not laboratory data. Testing tools (extension, PageSpeed Insights in lab mode) are useful for testing and seeing the immediat...
John Mueller Jun 12, 2020
🔔

Get real-time analysis of the latest Google SEO declarations

Be the first to know every time a new official Google statement drops — with full expert analysis.

No spam. Unsubscribe in one click.