Official statement
Other statements from this video 22 ▾
- 3:03 Do temporary 404 errors during a migration really kill your SEO?
- 4:56 Is it true that Googlebot crawls from the USA: how can you avoid the geo-IP cloaking trap?
- 8:42 Can you really block Googlebot state by state in the U.S. without breaking everything?
- 11:31 Why does Google not index all your pages despite active crawling?
- 12:17 Are Reddit's nofollow links really useless for SEO?
- 14:14 Should you always enable loading='lazy' on all your images to boost SEO?
- 15:25 Should you really reduce the number of language versions for hreflang?
- 18:27 Should you really fix every 404 error reported in Search Console?
- 20:47 Are jump links really useless for Google's crawling?
- 21:55 Should you disavow ghost backlinks that are only visible in Search Console?
- 23:20 Why doesn't the Disavow file hide bad links in Search Console?
- 29:18 Should you really contextualize the alt attribute beyond a visual description?
- 33:02 Is Google algorithmically downgrading specific sectors during health crises?
- 34:06 Should you really use different domain names for a multilingual site?
- 36:28 Should you really make all recipe images indexable to perform well in SEO?
- 37:49 Should you encode non-ASCII characters in XML sitemap URLs?
- 38:15 Does Hreflang Really Ensure Accurate Geographic Targeting for Your International Traffic?
- 41:05 Why does Google only index one version when your country pages are nearly identical?
- 45:51 Should you develop unique content to effectively index various versions of the same service?
- 46:27 Should you create a new page or update the existing one for a temporary change?
- 49:01 Is it really necessary to avoid using multiple title and meta description tags on a single page?
- 52:13 Are 500/503 errors lasting a few hours really invisible to your indexing?
Google states that having many 301 redirects and 404 pages does not negatively affect a site's SEO. No specific action is required: there's no need to block these URLs or treat them differently. This statement aims to reassure webmasters who often mistakenly worry about a negative impact on their crawl budget or ranking.
What you need to understand
Why does Google want to reassure us about 301s and 404s?
301 redirects and 404 pages create disproportionate anxiety among many SEO practitioners. Many believe that accumulating hundreds of 301s or 404s in Search Console signals a poorly maintained, even penalized, site.
Google regularly reiterates that these HTTP codes are normal web mechanisms. A deleted page returns a 404—that's expected. A moved URL redirects with a 301—that's best practice. The engine handles these situations daily across billions of pages.
What does 'no problem' really mean?
Google states that there is no algorithmic penalty related to the volume of 301s or 404s. Your site will not lose positions simply because you have 500 pages in 404 or 300 active redirects.
The engine does not expect a perfect site. 404s are even helpful: they properly signal that a resource no longer exists, allowing Google to efficiently de-index the URL. 301s pass PageRank and consolidate authority on the new URL.
Do we really need to do nothing with these URLs?
The statement insists: there’s no need to block via robots.txt or treat these pages differently. Blocking a 404 in robots.txt prevents Googlebot from noticing the deletion—the URL remains in memory, unresolved.
For 301s, blocking them would be counterproductive: the engine wouldn’t be able to follow the redirect and would lose track of the relevance signal. Allowing Googlebot to freely access 301s and 404s enables it to clean the index properly.
- Volume of 301/404: no critical threshold—Google treats these codes as normal regardless of quantity
- Crawl budget: 404s consume budget, but this is problematic only if your site has millions of pages and limited crawl
- PageRank transmission: 301s pass authority—keeping them active is thus beneficial, not harmful
- Blocking via robots.txt: contraindicated for 301s and 404s—prevents the engine from correctly processing the URL
- Manual cleaning: useful for reducing noise in Search Console, but not an SEO obligation
SEO Expert opinion
Is this statement consistent with on-the-ground observations?
Yes, overall. Sites accumulating thousands of 404s without vigilance generally do not see a direct ranking drop. Well-managed 301 redirects do indeed preserve traffic and authority.
But—and this is where nuance comes in—this statement does not say that 301s and 404s are consequence-free. A site with 10,000 uncleaned 404 pages clutters Search Console, complicates the analysis of real errors, and can unnecessarily consume crawl budget on obsolete URLs.
What nuances should be added to this official position?
Google is talking here about direct algorithmic impact. What it doesn’t specify is that an excess volume of 404s may signal a structural problem. If you are constantly generating thousands of 404s, it might be that your CMS is producing ghost URLs, or that your internal linking massively points to deleted pages.
Similarly, chains of 301 redirects (A → B → C) slow down loading times and dilute the transmitted PageRank. Google recommends avoiding them, even though it tolerates their existence. [To be checked]: there is no public data on the exact threshold where a chain of 301s becomes problematic—the estimates vary from 3 to 5 hops maximum.
In what cases does this rule not fully apply?
On very large sites (e-commerce, media, directories), the crawl budget becomes a limited resource. If Googlebot spends 30% of its time crawling obsolete 404s or 301s, there is less budget for strategic pages. In this context, regular cleaning becomes essential.
Another case: soft 404s—pages that return a 200 code with a "page not found" message. Google detects and treats them as errors, but they pollute the index. Here, "doing nothing" would be a mistake. You need to correct the HTTP code to return a true 404.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should you actually do with your 301s and 404s?
Do not panic at a Search Console report full of 404s. First, identify their source: are they coming from internal links, outdated external backlinks, or old URLs crawled by bots?
For 404s from internal links: fix them. Update your menus, content, and sitemaps. For 404s from dead backlinks: leave them alone, or set up a 301 redirect if the dead URL received significant traffic or authority.
Regarding 301 redirects, regularly audit to avoid chains. If A redirects to B, and B then redirects to C, shorten it: make A point directly to C. Use a crawling tool (Screaming Frog, Oncrawl) to spot these chains automatically.
What mistakes should you absolutely avoid?
Never block 404s in robots.txt. Google will not be able to see the deletion, and the URL will remain indefinitely in memory, not being properly de-indexed. This is counterproductive.
Avoid soft 404s: if a page no longer exists, return a 404 code, not a 200 with an error message. Google detects these fake 404s and reports them as errors in Search Console. Configure your server or CMS correctly to return the right HTTP codes.
Do not systematically transform every 404 into a 301 redirect to the homepage. This is an discouraged practice ("soft 404" in disguise). Redirect only to a relevant page—otherwise, leave it a clean 404.
How can you check that your management of 301s/404s is healthy?
Regularly check Search Console: section "Coverage" then "Excluded". Filter by "Not Found (404)". If the volume suddenly spikes, look for the cause (poorly managed migration, massive content deletion, CMS bug).
Crawl your site with Screaming Frog or Sitebulb to find broken internal links and redirect chains. Prioritize fixing internal links—that's where you have total control.
- Audit 404s in Search Console: identify sources (internal vs external)
- Fix internal links pointing to 404s
- Set up 301s only to relevant pages, never en masse to the homepage
- Ensure your 404s return a proper 404 code, not a 200
- Detect and remove chains of 301 redirects (A → B → C)
- Never block 404s or 301s in robots.txt
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les redirections 301 permanentes diluent-elles le PageRank au fil du temps ?
Combien de temps faut-il conserver une redirection 301 après une migration ?
Faut-il soumettre les pages 404 dans un sitemap pour accélérer leur désindexation ?
Un volume élevé de 404 peut-il affecter le crawl budget sur un petit site ?
Dois-je rediriger en 301 toutes les URLs en 404 qui reçoivent encore des backlinks ?
🎥 From the same video 22
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 54 min · published on 15/05/2020
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