What does Google say about SEO? /

Official statement

If 404 pages receive external backlinks, Google does not utilize these links (no problem). If a new page replaces the old one (e.g., a new product), redirecting the old URL is relevant for users and SEO. Redirecting all 404s to the homepage is treated as a soft 404 (equivalent 404), and Google ignores these links.
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Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 56:09 💬 EN 📅 26/06/2020 ✂ 21 statements
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Other statements from this video 20
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  4. 13:13 Is the DMCA or Web Spam Report the most effective method against content scraping?
  5. 17:08 Are category pages with product snippets really free from duplicate content penalties?
  6. 18:11 Can ads drag down your Google ranking because of speed issues?
  7. 27:44 Can invalid HTML really sabotage your Google ranking?
  8. 29:18 Should you worry about a Google penalty when deleting content in bulk?
  9. 29:51 Can you really merge multiple domains using Google's Change of Address Tool?
  10. 31:56 Can 301 redirects to fix broken URLs lead to a Google penalty?
  11. 33:55 Why does Google take months to display your new favicon?
  12. 34:35 Is a crawlable root page really necessary for a multilingual site?
  13. 37:17 Does Google really index all the keywords on a page or is there selective filtering?
  14. 38:50 Is it really necessary to translate your content to rank in another language?
  15. 40:58 Should you really optimize geographic accessibility for Googlebot to crawl your site?
  16. 43:04 Subdomain or Subdirectory: Which URL Structure Should You Choose for a Multilingual Site?
  17. 44:44 Do URLs with parameters rank as well as clean URLs?
  18. 51:59 Should you really worry about the impact of 404 redirects on your crawl budget?
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📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google deliberately ignores backlinks pointing to 404 pages - it's neither penalizing nor recoverable. Redirecting a 404 to a relevant replacement page (new product, updated content) passes SEO juice and enhances user experience. In contrast, systematically redirecting all 404s to the homepage is treated as a soft 404: Google detects this maneuver and ignores those links just like they point to a real 404.

What you need to understand

Why does Google completely ignore backlinks to 404s?

Google considers that a link to a nonexistent page offers no value to user experience. When Googlebot crawls a backlink and encounters an HTTP 404 code, it records this link as unusable.

Contrary to popular belief, these links are not penalizing for your site. They also do not significantly consume crawl budget once Google understands that the page no longer exists. The engine treats them simply as dead ends and moves on.

In what situations is a 301 redirect to a new page relevant?

Google's logic is clear: redirect only when equivalent or superior content replaces the old one. A typical example: if you discontinue a product and launch its 2.0 version, you're migrating an article to a restructured URL, or you're merging two similar pages.

In these scenarios, a 301 redirect accomplishes two goals. First, it preserves the equity of backlinks accumulated by the old URL - PageRank, thematic authority, engagement signals. Second, it avoids user frustration: a visitor arriving via an old link lands on relevant content instead of an error message.

Why are massive redirects to the homepage detected as soft 404?

Google has refined its algorithms to detect patterns of irrelevant redirects. When hundreds of deleted pages all redirect to the homepage, the engine identifies that these redirects serve no legitimate user purpose.

It then treats these redirects as soft 404s: technically, the server sends a 301 code and then a 200, but Google interprets the final destination as a contextual error. Result: backlinks pointing to these old URLs are ignored, just as if they were leading to real 404s. Therefore, you gain no SEO benefit from this practice.

  • Backlinks to 404s do not penalize your site - Google simply ignores them with no negative impact on your ranking.
  • Redirecting a 404 only makes sense to equivalent or superior content - replacement product, merged page, structural URL migration.
  • Mass redirects to the homepage are detected as soft 404 and provide no transfer of PageRank or SEO improvement.
  • Crawl budget is not significantly impacted by 404s once Google has integrated that they are final.
  • User experience remains the deciding criterion: a redirect should provide a relevant response to visitors arriving via an old link.

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with field observations?

Absolutely. For years, SEO audits have confirmed that sites with hundreds of 404s suffer no visible penalties in the SERPs as long as the rest of the site is healthy. A/B tests conducted on migrations also show that intelligently redirecting (to relevant content) effectively transfers equity, while "catch-all" redirects to the homepage yield nothing.

However, one point remains unclear in Mueller's statement: at what threshold does Google classify a redirect as a soft 404? Is it a ratio of redirected pages to homepage? An analysis of the content of the destination page? A combination of behavioral signals (immediate bounce rate, return to SERP)? [To be verified] - Google never precisely communicates on these detection mechanisms to prevent workarounds.

What nuances should we consider regarding soft 404s?

The concept of soft 404 is not limited to massive redirects to the homepage. Google can also identify a page that returns a 200 code but displays a message like "product unavailable" or "content deleted" without any real added value as a soft 404. The key signal: the absence of substantial and relevant content for search intent.

Let’s be honest: some e-commerce CMSs automatically configure redirects to category pages or the homepage when a product is permanently out of stock by default. If these redirects point to a thematically close category with other similar products, Google may tolerate them - even value them if the UX is genuinely preserved. But as soon as the logical link breaks (tech product redirected to a general homepage), the risk of soft 404 rises.

In what scenarios does this rule not strictly apply?

There are pragmatic exceptions that are rarely documented by Google. On a news site, redirecting an outdated article (dated event, expired information) to an evergreen thematic dossier may make sense if this file contextualizes the old information. Google seems to tolerate this type of redirection when the destination page provides a real editorial continuity.

Similarly, in a major redesign where the architecture changes radically, some old URLs simply have no direct equivalent. In these edge cases, redirecting to the closest parent category (not the homepage) remains preferable to leaving a 404, provided this category is rich in content and relevant. But be cautious: if you multiply this pattern across hundreds of URLs, you risk crossing the threshold of algorithmic detection.

Point of caution: Google Search Console now reports detected soft 404s in the Coverage tab. If you see redirected URLs appearing there, it’s a sign that your redirects are considered irrelevant – adjust your strategy immediately.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you actually do with your 404 pages that receive backlinks?

Start by identifying the 404s that truly attract quality backlinks. Use Ahrefs, Majestic, or Semrush to export all 404 error URLs with their incoming backlinks. Focus on those with a Domain Rating > 40 or several links coming from authoritative sites.

For each identified 404, ask yourself: is there on my current site equivalent or superior content that would fulfill the intent of the old page? If yes, set up a 301 redirect to that URL. If not, leave the 404 as is – you lose nothing by ignoring these backlinks and avoid polluting your redirect profile.

What mistakes should you absolutely avoid in managing 404s?

The classic mistake: redirecting all 404s in bulk to the homepage “to not lose anything.” This is exactly what Google detects and penalizes as soft 404. You waste setup time for a null result, or even counterproductive if Google starts to systematically ignore your redirects.

Another common trap: redirecting to a too generic or off-topic category page. A real-life example: a tech site redirects a smartphone product page to the "High-Tech" homepage that also includes televisions, drones, etc. The visitor arriving via a contextual backlink ends up confused. Google picks up this degraded UX signal (time on page < 5 seconds, immediate return to SERP) and may reclassify the redirect as a soft 404.

How can you check if your redirect strategy is compliant?

Set up regular monitoring in Google Search Console, Coverage section. Filter on "Excluded" and look for "Soft 404" statuses. If URLs you’ve redirected appear here, that’s an indication Google regards your redirects as irrelevant.

Supplement this with a Screaming Frog or Oncrawl crawl following the redirect chains. Any 301 → 200 redirect where the destination page has a bounce rate > 80% and an average time < 10 seconds merits deep examination: either the destination content is not relevant, or the redirect itself has issues.

  • Export all your 404s with backlinks using a backlink analysis tool (Ahrefs, Majestic, Semrush).
  • For each 404, identify if there's relevant replacement content on your current site.
  • Set up 301 redirects only to thematically equivalent or superior pages.
  • Leave all URLs without a logical equivalent as 404 – no risk of penalty.
  • Monitor Google Search Console (Coverage > Soft 404) for detected rejected redirects.
  • Analyze the user behavior (bounce rate, time on page) of the destination pages of your redirects.
Intelligent management of 404s and redirects relies on a case-by-case assessment: redirect only when user relevance is evident, accept leaving 404s when no equivalent content exists. This approach requires thorough analysis of your architecture, backlinks, and user intents – optimizations that can quickly become time-consuming on medium or large sites. If you manage an extensive product catalog, a complex redesign, or a rich content history, hiring a specialized SEO agency may save you valuable time while avoiding costly errors in terms of traffic and equity.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Les backlinks pointant vers des pages 404 pénalisent-ils mon site ?
Non, Google ignore simplement ces liens sans aucun impact négatif sur votre classement. Ils ne constituent ni une pénalité ni un signal de mauvaise qualité.
Puis-je récupérer le jus SEO d'une 404 en la redirigeant vers n'importe quelle page ?
Non, seule une redirection vers un contenu pertinent et équivalent transfère réellement l'equity. Les redirections massives vers la homepage sont détectées comme soft 404 et ignorées par Google.
Qu'est-ce qu'un soft 404 exactement ?
Un soft 404 est une page qui renvoie un code HTTP 200 (ou une redirection 301) mais que Google considère comme vide de contenu pertinent. Le moteur la traite alors comme une erreur 404 classique.
Comment savoir si mes redirections sont considérées comme soft 404 par Google ?
Consultez Google Search Console, section Couverture, filtre Exclues. Les URLs marquées « Soft 404 » y apparaissent explicitement. Surveillez aussi les métriques UX (taux de rebond élevé, temps sur page faible) des pages de destination.
Vaut-il mieux laisser une 404 ou rediriger vers une catégorie parent ?
Cela dépend de la pertinence thématique. Si la catégorie parent est vraiment liée et riche en contenu similaire, la redirection peut avoir du sens. Sinon, mieux vaut laisser la 404 – elle n'a aucun effet négatif.
🏷 Related Topics
Domain Age & History E-commerce AI & SEO Links & Backlinks Domain Name Redirects

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Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 56 min · published on 26/06/2020

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